GUIDELINE 6: Communicate effectively with migrants

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Migrants need to understand potential risks associated with a crisis, where and how to obtain assistance, and how to inform stakeholders of their needs. Stakeholders should find appropriate channels to communicate with migrants and to identify their needs and capacities. To do so effectively, States, private sector actors, international organizations, and civil society should address language, cultural, and other barriers. The effects of crises, such as power failures, loss of internet and satellite communication systems, and even the deliberate spread ofmisinformation (for instance, by people smugglers) may disrupt or constrain communication with migrants.

Communication efforts should also take into account the diversity among migrants present in host States. Diverse, multiple, formal, and informal methods of communication can help overcome barriers to effective communication with migrants. Women migrants are a large majority of domestic workers worldwide. Due to the isolated nature of this work, women in domestic work are extremely vulnerable to abuse and exploitation, including physical and sexual abuse, forced labor, and confinement. In times of crisis, this vulnerability is exacerbated and they can be hard to reach via traditional communication channels. Fear of being detected, detained, or deported may inhibit migrants in an irregular immigration situation from accessing available communication channels. Migrant children can become unaccompanied or separated. They absorb information and communicate their needs in different ways than adults. Elderly migrants sometimes lack host-language capabilities. Migrants with disabilities may need braille, audio cues, and other disability-sensitive interventions. In the chaos that can ensue during crises, migrants in detention may be overlooked. Efforts to communicate with migrants should be sensitive to the predicaments of migrants in different circumstances.

Communication channels can take advantage of social media, places of worship, and migrants’ connections with their families and communities in their States of origin. Enlisting and involving migrants and faith-based and other civil society in establishing communication methods, and promoting their ability to communicate with each other, can facilitate communication with migrants, including hard-to-reach and hard-to-engage populations. Health or outreach workers who are already present in the community may be able to communicate in the languages migrants speak and understand different cultures in the community. Engaging and training them may be an effective method to deliver information to migrant communities.

Sample Practices

  • Multiple traditional and innovative communication channels to reach diverse migrant populations and minimize the effects of possible communication disruptions.
  • Multiple mediums for communication in the languages migrants speak, at diverse literacy levels, to accommodate ways in which people absorb information, including accessible formats for persons with disabilities.
  • Mobile applications and social media as a cost-effective, user-friendly, and widely accessible mechanism to provide crisis-related information.
  • Helplines, hotlines, and call centers as an accessible and low-tech means through which one-way or two-way communication with migrants can be facilitated.
  • Communication by civil society, especially migrant networks, diaspora, and faith-based actors with migrants in an irregular immigration status and others who may be hard to access. 
Country:
Japan
Type of Practice:
Education and orientation

The 3.11 Earthquake (2011 Tohoku Earthquake, or the Great East Japan Earthquake) has created the need for large-scale disaster prevention measures.

Country:
Australia
Type of Practice:
Manuals

Developed by Emergency Management Australia (EMA), within the Australian Government, these guidelines are aimed to provide emergency management agencies and planning committees with practical guidance in providing appropriate, responsive, accessible and sustainable services to a multicultural...

Country:
Australia
Type of Practice:
Awareness raising and communication tools

The State Emergency Service (SES) of the New South West Region of Australia (NSW SES) is committed to providing information on and resources for preparing for, responding to and recovering from floods, storms and tsunami to people from different cultural and linguistic backgrounds.

Country:
United States of America
Type of Practice:
Tools

The goal of all language access planning and implementation is to ensure that agencies communicate effectively with limited English proficient (LEP) individuals.

Country:
United States of America
Type of Practice:
Government bodies

The Federal Coordination and Compliance Section of the Civil Rights Division within the U.S.

Country:
Philippines
Type of Practice:
Awareness raising and communication tools

Involving Filipino communities abroad in times of crisis is one of the significant features in Filipino diplomatic posts’ contingency plans.

Country:
Indonesia
Type of Practice:
Education and orientation

In Indonesia, the Migrant Worker Placement and Protection Law of 2004 states that all migrant workers must complete the Final Pre-Departure Briefing, or Pembekalan Akhir Pemberangkatan (PAP).

Country:
Sri Lanka
Type of Practice:
Mobile and internet-based technologies

With the objective of reducing hardship faced by migrants during the first week in the new country, the Sri Lankan Ministry of Foreign Employment and Welfare has partnered with Sri Lanka’s leading Mobile solutions provider “Dialog Axiata” to provide an exclusive connectivity solution for...

Country:
India
Type of Practice:
Mobile and internet-based technologies

MigCall is a mobile application for the benefit of Indian workers in Oman and other countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (CGG).

Country:
India
Type of Practice:
Manuals

The Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs has finalised country manuals for the Gulf Cooperation Council Member States and others. These manuals contain general information as well as specific information and data about the relevant destination countries.