Glossary
The EMN Glossary – as one of the key products of the EMN - improves comparability by enabling a common understanding and use of terms and definitions relating to asylum and migration. The Glossary draws on a variety of sources, but primarily on the legislation of the EU asylum and immigration acquis, and makes terms available in the majority of EU Member State languages.
The online version is regularly updated and available in various languages.
- BG: миграционен профил
- CZ: migrační profil
- DE: Migrationsprofil
- EE: rändeprofiil
- EN: migration profile
- ES: perfil migratorio
- FI: muuttoprofiili
- FR: profil migratoire
- GA: próifíl imirce
- GR: μεταναστευτικό προφίλ
- HU: migrációs profil
- IT: profilo migratorio
- LT: migracijos profilis
- LV: migrācijas profils
- MT: Profil migratorju
- NL: migratieprofiel
- NO: migrasjonsprofil
- PL: profil migracyjny
- PT: perfil migratório / profiling
- RO: profil de migraţie
- SE: migrationsprofil
- SK: migračný profil
- SL: migracijski profil
Definition
A tool to bring together and analyse all the relevant information needed to develop policy in the field of migration and development and to monitor the impact of policies implemented.
Related
Cooperation Platform on Migration and Development, Global Forum on Migration and Development mobility partnership
Comments
1. Migration profiles are reports on the migration situation of a country for the purpose of increasing the evidence-base for their own policy development. Such reports contain data and analysis on current migration patterns, labour market trends, remittance flows, information on diasporas and other development-related data.
2. Migration profiles have been produced by IOM and by CARIM (Consortium for Applied Research on International Migration) amongst other organisations. For more information see the description of migration profiles on the IOM website.
3. The Global Forum on Migration and Development also hosts a repository of migration profiles.
4. Migration profiles entail an analysis of the policy and practice of a state and not that of a person. In this vein, the concept should not be confused with the profiling of a ‘person’.
2. Migration profiles have been produced by IOM and by CARIM (Consortium for Applied Research on International Migration) amongst other organisations. For more information see the description of migration profiles on the IOM website.
3. The Global Forum on Migration and Development also hosts a repository of migration profiles.
4. Migration profiles entail an analysis of the policy and practice of a state and not that of a person. In this vein, the concept should not be confused with the profiling of a ‘person’.