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7 - Obstacles to, and opportunities for, ratification of the ICRMW in Asia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 December 2010

Ryszard Cholewinski
Affiliation:
International Organization for Migration, Geneva
Paul de Guchteneire
Affiliation:
UNESCO, Paris
Antoine Pecoud
Affiliation:
UNESCO, Paris
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Summary

Introduction

To date, among the forty-one States Parties that have ratified the ICRMW, three are situated in those parts of the Asian region under discussion here (South, South-East and East Asia): East Timor (in 2004), the Philippines (in 1995) and Sri Lanka (in 1996); with Bangladesh (in 1998), Cambodia and Indonesia (both in 2004) having signed only. The first two ratifications by Asian countries took place in the 1990s – the decade during which only twelve of the current forty-one ratifications occurred. The other twenty-nine countries have acceded since 2000. The Philippines was among the early signatories (1993) and was the first Asian country to ratify. This is not surprising considering that it participated in the deliberations during the Convention's drafting process in the early 1980s and had been a significant labour exporter since the mid 1970s. When looking at ratification rates from a cross-regional perspective, most of the current States Parties are located in Africa (seventeen ratifications), followed by South America (fourteen ratifications). In this respect, despite its overall population size and migration volume, Asia is surprisingly under-represented among States Parties. This is, however, consistent with Asia's overall low rate of ratifications of all UN conventions and covenants, where it takes bottom position. Yet, one phenomenon consistent with the rest of the world is that, so far, no migrant receiving country in Asia has ratified the ICRMW.

Type
Chapter
Information
Migration and Human Rights
The United Nations Convention on Migrant Workers' Rights
, pp. 171 - 192
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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