UNHCR Explainer
A Venezuelan family walks along the highway that runs parallel to the border with Chile on 3 December, 2021, in Peru's southern region of Tacna. © UNHCR/Raul Garcia Pereira
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All people who move between countries deserve full respect for their human rights and dignity. There are, however, different reasons and motivations for people to leave their homes and, consequently, different international legal obligations that arise and apply to those whose lives were, are, or may be at risk should they return.
Refugees are specifically defined and protected in international law. These are individuals who have fled their homes to escape persecution, conflict, violence, serious human rights violations or other events seriously disturbing public order, and who seek safety in another country. As a result, they require “international protection” from another country, where their own country of origin is unable or willing to protect them. They are exercising a fundamental, universal human right – the right to seek and enjoy asylum. According to international refugee law, a person is a refugee – and should be treated as such – as soon as they meet this definition, even if they are still waiting for formal recognition by States or UNHCR.
States have specific obligations towards refugees under international law, including:
In some countries, refugees may have access to other forms of legal stay, including free movement agreements, work permits or student visas, so may choose not to apply for asylum. However, these other forms of residence do not affect their need for or right to international protection.
Asylum-seekers are individuals who intend to seek, or are awaiting a decision on their request for, international protection. States have an obligation to ensure anyone approaching their borders in need of asylum can access their territory, present their case and have it examined fairly and efficiently. While not every asylum-seeker will ultimately be recognized as a refugee, any individual who presents a claim to asylum must have it examined fairly and efficiently.
Migrants are not as specifically defined under international law, but the term has been used to refer to people who choose to move across borders, not because of any direct threats of persecution, serious harm, or death, but exclusively for other reasons, including for work, education or family reunification. Other complex factors may also be at play, such as escaping hardships due to environmental disasters, famine, or extreme poverty.
Those who leave their countries for these reasons would not ordinarily be in need of international protection, as they – unlike refugees – would continue, in principle, to enjoy the protection of their own country when they are abroad and when they return.
While not fulfilling the criteria of the refugee definition, it may be that migrants require assistance, help and protection of their rights at various points during their journeys. But they would be protected by international human rights law and, in some circumstances, they may also be entitled to protection from return to their country of origin or removal from the host country based on human rights grounds.
Increasingly around the world, “mixed movements” occur where refugees and migrants travel along the same routes across land and sea borders. While their legal status and motivations differ, they may face similar dangers along the way – including violence, abuse and exploitation at the hands of human traffickers, smugglers, criminals, armed elements, other rogue actors, and even border guards or other officials.
While such incidents and experiences taking place on journeys outside countries of origin will not automatically transform a “migrant” into a “refugee” (because refugee status depends on an individual being unable to return home owing to the danger, violence or harm from which they fled), all States must take a humane, rights-based approach when receiving people at their borders. They must ensure people in need of international protection (refugees) can swiftly access asylum, and that victims of human trafficking or human rights abuses – whether refugees or migrants – are rapidly identified and supported.
The international community has long acknowledged the distinction between refugees and migrants – from the codified body of laws developed last century specific to refugees (the 1951 Refugee Convention and its 1967 Protocol as well as other legal texts, such as the 1969 OAU Refugee Convention), to the more recent New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants, and the two distinct frameworks it spurred – the Global Compact on Refugees and the Global Compact for Migration.
There is an increasing and troubling trend in public discourse, the media and statistical reporting to use “migrant” as an umbrella term for both migrants and refugees. This conflation is not only inaccurate but can have serious consequences for people who need international protection. Incorrectly referring to refugees and asylum-seekers as migrants (or as “illegal”, “unauthorized” or “undocumented” arrivals):
For accuracy, clarity, and to avoid the consequences of conflation, the correct way to acknowledge the specific, critical needs of people in mixed movement situations is to refer to both “refugees and migrants”. This allows for proper identification and responses for those involved, ensuring refugees get access to asylum and vulnerable migrants get the tailored support they need. More broadly, refugees and migrants should collectively be referred to as “individuals”, “people”, or “people on the move”.
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