The Strategic Use of Resettlement
Expanding EU refugee resettlement would yield strategic, political, and protection benefits—but would not meaningfully curb asylum flows or smuggling.
In recent years, concerns over how best to address problems associated with asylum systems across Europe as well as migrant smuggling have evolved into discussions over the strategic use of refugee resettlement in the European Union. Being considered by the European Commission and certain Member States, resettlement is a process whereby refugees having fled persecution across a national border may be screened and selected from their region of origin. Although six Member States have existing resettlement programs, this report seeks to evaluate the extent to which expanding resettlement programs across the European Union can provide a strategic tool to manage a greater number of legal arrivals to EU Member States and whether Member States possess the political will to engage in resettlement.
Although there is little evidence that engaging in resettlement will have a significant impact on reducing the number of spontaneous asylum seekers or smuggling, the report finds that the strategic use of resettlement has many benefits. In addition to promoting the European harmonization process at large, public perceptions of resettled refuges tend to be more positive than those of asylum seekers and strong resettlement programs can serve to demonstrate that governments are successfully managing refugee protection. In addition, resettlement can be used to bolster solidarity with countries of first asylum, offers a viable durable solution to the protection needs of refugees worldwide, and can be effectively mobilized as part of a larger comprehensive approach.
About the Global Program
The Global Program bridges policy advice, research, and candid dialogue to design effective migration policies, drawing on global evidence and anticipating the forces reshaping how people move.