Migration
in sentence
1241 examples of Migration in a sentence
In fact, estimates of potential
migration
flows from East to West are relatively small.
There is another, less obvious, reason why the EU's policy on
migration
is flawed.
The
migration
crisis could lead to the end of the Schengen Agreement, and (together with other domestic troubles) to the end of German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government.
Nowadays, most talk focuses on
migration
as a means of letting overpopulated developing countries fill the labor shortages of developed countries with graying populations.
Will developed countries really allow for
migration
on such a scale?
This large-scale migration, which is putting economic and social pressure on host countries across the continent, is driven largely by factors like poverty, instability, and natural disasters.
Africa’s youngest entrepreneurs are not only finding ways to support themselves and contribute to their communities; they are solving the main cause of
migration
on – and off – the continent.
Today’s key global problems – terrorism and extremism, poverty and inequality, climate change, migration, and epidemics – are worsening daily.
Labor
migration
operated as a safety valve against even worse unemployment.
Labor
migration
in Europe is, historically, far less extensive.
Over the coming decades, demographic shifts, climate change, and human migration, will compound AMR by making it easier for pathogens to spread.
Likewise,
migration
could affect per capita GDP growth.
Likewise, they must consider whether they fulfilled their responsibility to protect the EU’s external borders from the large-scale
migration
that has obscured the difference between those fleeing death and those seeking economic opportunity.
This reflects four “megatrends”: individual empowerment and the growth of a global middle class; diffusion of power from states to informal networks and coalitions; demographic changes, owing to urbanization, migration, and aging; and increased demand for food, water, and energy.
Just as German Chancellor Angela Merkel has been at the political forefront of the
migration
crisis, the Federation of German Industries (BDI) has been at the business forefront.
The alt-right has been highly successful at exploiting people’s fears to undermine global solutions for global challenges such as
migration
and climate change.
And with a European border patrol and coast guard, Europeans would be far less reliant on Turkey, Russia, and others when it comes to managing
migration
flows.
After spending weeks arguing with EU leaders about migration, the government is now challenging the Maastricht Treaty’s rules, all in an effort to maintain popular support.
By September, Germany had probably received some 400,000 applications or more, with the dramatic increase in
migration
flows since summer and before the reinstatement of border controls expected to push the number of asylum-seekers to 800,000 this year.
At that point, the Armageddon scenarios of droughts, rising sea levels, floods, energy and resource wars, and mass
migration
will become a reality.
Because that challenge is closely connected to other issues – like migration, conflict, rural development, and gender – policymakers must cast a wide net when considering solutions.
Rethinking Fortress EuropeLONDON – There is something rotten about the European Union’s debate on
migration.
The waters between Europe and Africa are the world’s deadliest
migration
route.
That is why it needs a
migration
policy that reflects the values on which it was founded.
But Europe’s debate on
migration
is so toxic that the forces actually causing people to move are seldom discussed.
Europe’s institutional response is to view all
migration
as a border-management issue.
Meanwhile, the patchwork of national asylum and
migration
policies makes a cohesive framework impossible to devise.
This challenge was reflected in the EU foreign ministers’ recent declaration on migration, which was so vague that it defied practical interpretation.
Europe desperately needs to have a mature, fact-based conversation about
migration.
Strict border controls can never be more than one part of the solution to the EU’s
migration
challenge.
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