Major International Migrations
Major International Migrations
The number of refugees worldwide reached 27 5 million in 2016, with 40,3 million internally displaced people and 28
million asylum seekers. The major source of refugees in 2015 and 2016 was the developed world, with the US, Canada
and Northern Furope accepting the most.
In 2016, the global number of refugees reached 27.5 million, with 40,3 million internally displaced people
and 28 million asylum seekers. The developed world was the primary source of refugees in 2015 and 2016, with
the United States, Canada, Northern Europe and Pakistan, and the European Union having the highest
number of refugees. The United States accepted 9284 refugees in 2016..
International movement
The movement of people between countries is a process that has been ongoing for centuries. There are now 244
million people living outside the country in which they were born, a 41 per cent increase. This movement has
affected regions and countries in different ways, such as the United States, Canada, Australia, and New
Zealand. In the last 30 years, these four countries have experienced a change in the source of their
immigrants, with many of them coming from Asia and South America.
Working conditions
These Middle Eastern immigrants send home billions of dollars in remittances to their families. However,
they frequently work long hours and have limited ability to challenge their employers, some of whom fail to
provide promised pay and benefits. Workers' working conditions in Dubai, for example, have been described as
"less than human" by Human Rights Walch (a human rights NGO).
Population movements from the middle east and the northern africa
In other parts of the Middle East and Northern Africa, people are fleeing to seek economic opportunities or
to avoid violence or political instability; in North Africa, a region of emigration, foreigners account for
less than 1% of the population. Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Turkey account for
one-third of France's 5.3 million foreigners, while Germany has one-third of its foreign-born population
from the Middle East.