Displacement and migration explained in 5 graphics
June 20, 2023Where the majority of refugees come from — and where they go
The office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has stated that, as of mid-2023, of all the refugees under the UNHCR's mandate and people in need of international protection, 52% came from just three countries.
The majority are from Syria, where the initial uprising during the 2011 Arab Spring evolved into a civil war that still continues today. The second largest national group is 5.7 million people from Ukraine, where no end to the Russian invasion of the country is in sight. A similar amount of people came from Afghanistan. After the government collapsed there in August 2021, extremist religious group, the Taliban, retook control of the country.
According to the UNHCR, refugees are persons outside their own country of citizenship or permanent residence and who, because of their race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in social groups, fear persecution, cannot avail themselves of the protection of their own country or cannot return there for fear of persecution.
A large proportion of refugees, then, hails from a small number of countries. But when it comes to host countries, the situation is less clear. The six countries that have, numerically speaking, taken in the most people host more than a third of all refugees under the UNHCR's mandate and others in need of international protection. They are Turkey, Iran, Colombia, Germany, Pakistan and Uganda.
The last two nations dispute the false impression — one shared by many Europeans — that all refugees from Africa and Asia head for Europe. UN figures show that around 80% of migrants on the African continent migrate within their own region. In Asia, too, most refugees and migrants remain on that continent. Regional migration is the predominant pattern of movement.
This pattern is important. Because although the 46 least-developed countries in the world accounted for less than 1.3% of the world's gross domestic product in 2022, they also took in more than a fifth of all refugees.
In addition to the sheer number of migrants, it's also relevant to ask which countries take in the most migrants and refugees as a proportion of their total population. Lebanon is at the forefront of this group. At the end of 2020, according to the statistics portal Statista, around 13% of people living in Lebanon were refugees, the majority of them from Syria. And this figure does not include Palestinian refugees, of whom hundreds of thousands reside in Lebanon.
Many may be surprised to learn that the Caribbean islands of Aruba and Curacao are also at the top of the table for the highest proportion of refugees in relation to population. According to Statista, at the end of 2020 Aruba actually had the highest proportion in the world. Of its 112,000 inhabitants, 16% were refugees, with the vast majority from nearby Venezuela. Aruba and Curacao are constituent countries of the Netherlands; as overseas territories, they are not part of the European Union but are closely associated with it.
Over 50,000 dead or missing since 2014
Refugees and migrants encounter many dangers on their journey toward a new life. They suffer hunger, fall ill or are subjected to violence. Many of them pay for leaving with their lives. According to information from the Missing Migrants Project of the International Organization for Migration (IOM), at least 50,000 people died or were registered as missing between 2014 and 2022.
More than half of these deaths and disappearances occurred on the Mediterranean route. Since 2014, more than 26,000 refugees and migrants have drowned attempting to cross the sea from Libya, Egypt or Morocco to Europe. This statistic makes the Mediterranean the most dangerous migration route in the world. The second-most dangerous region is Africa, and more specifically, the Sahara Desert.
There is also south-north migration in the Americas, with people from countries including Honduras, Guatemala, Venezuela and Haiti attempting to flee poverty, violence and political crises in their homelands. The final hurdle is crossing the border from Mexico into the US. Between October 2021 and October 2022, the US border protection force registered more than 2 million attempts by migrants to enter the United States — often in dangerous circumstances. The horrific deaths of 50 people made headlines last June, after they were abandoned in blistering temperatures in the back of a locked truck without air conditioning.
The IOM reported that thousands of people also died on the Asian continent this past year. Many were Afghans, or Rohingya from Myanmar. Also included in this number are, for example, East Africans who died off the coast of, or on, the Arabian Peninsula.
Why do people leave their homelands?
People may make the decision to leave their country or region of origin for any number of reasons — to work, for example, or to join a partner. However, not everyone leaves their homeland voluntarily.
Violence, natural disasters, or a lack of prospects often impel people to seek refuge elsewhere. Research has shown that people are often not migrating for one reason alone; rather, they are influenced by different, interrelated factors affecting them simultaneously.
The IOM has created a visual representation of the nine most important aspects and factors involved, based on a paper by the migration researchers Mathias Czaika and Constantin Reinprecht.
For example, a young person may decide to emigrate because there are a great many people of their age in their homeland (demographic aspect) and job prospects are poor (economic aspect), while better educational opportunities exist abroad (human development).
For the millions of Ukrainians who have left their country or region since February 2022, security is the most important factor. They are fleeing the war that Russia is waging in their country.
The environmental aspect also cannot be underestimated. Inhabitants of the Global South, who are already struggling to cope with poverty and conflict, are disproportionately affected by extreme weather events such as excessive rainfall, drought and hurricanes. In 2022, for example, devastating floods forced hundreds of thousands of people in Pakistan to flee their homes. The country was already in a severe economic crisis and has had to rely on international aid to provide for the flood victims, and for reconstruction.
Europe is sealing itself off
At the end of the Cold War, there were only around a dozen border walls worldwide. Since then, their number has increased more than sixfold, according to a specialist article published in March 2022. These walls, it said, have one main function: to stop irregular immigration — even though it has been proven that border installations are not particularly effective in this regard.
Europe is at the forefront of those countries erecting fences to seal off their borders. A European Parliament paper from last year stated that the European Union and the Schengen zone are now encircled or crossed by 19 border or separation fences. They have a combined length of 2,048 kilometers (1,273 miles) — compared to just 315 kilometers in 2014.
The longest fence in Europe is the one Lithuania has erected along much of its almost 700 kilometer border with the non-EU state of Belarus. The government in Vilnius upgraded it after thousands of people attempted to enter the EU irregularly in the late summer and autumn of 2021. The European Union has accused the Belarusian ruler Alexander Lukashenko of having deliberately arranged for migrants from crisis regions to be brought to the EU's external border.
Anyone who now tries to get from Belarus to Lithuania is confronted with a 4-meter (13-foot) high fence, barbed wire and surveillance cameras. Aid organizations such as Doctors Without Borders have on numerous occasions sharply criticized Lithuania and other European countries for their hard-line attitude toward refugees.
Displaced in their own country
Not everyone who is forced to leave their home also leaves their country. According to the UNHCR, 60% — the majority — of all "forcibly displaced people" around the world have, in fact, been internally displaced.
The proportion, the UNHCR said, is largest by far in Syria, where almost a third of the entire population are refugees in their own land. Following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, around 20% of the population has been displaced internally. Those countries are followed by Colombia and Yemen with 13%, Afghanistan at 9%, Congo at 6% and Ethiopia at 3%.
However, these numbers only include those who have been displaced by conflict and violence. Victims of climate change and natural disasters are not included in these figures — the UNHCR counts them separately. It reports that, over the course of 2021, 23.7 million people were internally displaced for environmental reasons. The largest displacements took place in China, the Philippines and India. People who migrate within their own country because of floods or drought are often able to return relatively quickly to their home regions.
This article was translated from German.