
WASHINGTON, DC — The fall of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad's regime in December 2024, largely ending a civil war that sparked one of the world’s biggest displacement crises, triggered a flurry of chiefly ad hoc policy announcements across Europe. Some governments suspended asylum processing for Syrians. Others are offering financial incentives for voluntary return or are carrying out status reviews of cases involving Syrians with criminal convictions, with an eye to returning them.
While large-scale return of displaced persons to Syria, which remains a fragile situation, or of similarly situated Ukrainians, whose country remains in active conflict, are unlikely in the near term, host-country publics experiencing hospitality fatigue are pressing governments to show that conflict-related protection is bounded. But rushed, uncoordinated returns risk destabilizing fragile post-conflict settings, triggering new displacement, burdening host-country economies and ultimately undermining the reconstruction goals that policymakers are seeking to advance.
A new report from the Migration Policy Institute's Transatlantic Council on Migration makes the case that high-income countries should replace ad hoc responses with phased, coordinated strategies that link near-term status decisions with longer-term reconstruction goals.
In From Exile to Return: Rebuilding Lives and States after Conflict, analysts Samuel Davidoff-Gore and Susan Fratzke map the levers available to policymakers who are navigating status transitions for Syrians, return planning and post-conflict reconstruction support.
The report identifies several elements for governments to consider:
Ultimately, how host-country governments handle return and reconstruction for Syrians and Ukrainians will shape the international protection system for years to come. Clear planning, transparent communication and coordinated action across host countries, countries of origin and international institutions can help policymakers navigate this complex moment.
“As governments grapple with how to demonstrate order and control in migration management systems, policymakers should seek to communicate to anxious publics that conflicts do wind down and that hospitality need not be a bottomless commitment,” Davidoff-Gore and Fratzke conclude. “However, they should balance such messaging against the risks of overly hasty return efforts… If policymakers can successfully navigate these tensions for Syria and Ukraine, they can create the playbook for future post-conflict scenarios.”
Read the report here: www.migrationpolicy.org/research/exile-return-after-conflict.
For more on the Transatlantic Council on Migration, visit: www.migrationpolicy.org/transatlantic.