From a Humanitarian Exodus to Long-Term Growth: Latin America's Journey Responding to the Venezuelan Exodus
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Date & Time: TUESDAY, MAY 11, 2021, 10:30 A.M. ET (DC, New York), 9:30 A.M. CT (Chicago, Bogota, Lima), 7:30 A.M. PT (Los Angeles, Vancouver)
OPENING SPEAKER: Andrew Selee, President, Migration Policy Institute (MPI)
SPEAKERS:
*Karina Gould, Minister of International Development, Canada
*Alejandra Botero, Presidential Advisor for Management and Compliance, Colombia
*Carlos Felipe Jaramillo, Vice President, Latin American and Caribbean Region, World Bank
*Felipe Muñoz, Chief of Migration Unit, Inter-American Development Bank
*Nancy Izzo Jackson, Senior Bureau Official, Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration, U.S. Department of State
MODERATOR: Josefina Townsend, Reporter and newscaster, Peru
REGISTER NOW: [link removed]
The convergence of the second largest refugee crisis in the world and the COVID-19 pandemic has left the more than 5.5 million migrants who have fled Venezuela in an even more vulnerable position. Lacking access to health care and often on the edge of poverty, these migrants and refugees have faced unprecedented challenges as the pandemic swept the globe, shutting down borders, taxing public-health systems, and leaving an economic downturn in its wake. The public-health crisis has also taxed the host governments trying to provide humanitarian assistance and avenues for migration for Venezuelans in the region.
The two countries where most Venezuelans have fled to-Colombia and Peru, with 1.7 million and 1.1 million arrivals respectively-have made significant efforts at welcoming these migrants despite the stress on their systems. Both countries have instituted policies and programs to respond to the short- and mid-term humanitarian challenges and are now taking steps towards longer-term integration of Venezuelans. Peru is offering migrants the option to register so that they can apply for regularization in the future. And Colombia created a Temporary Statute of Protection for Venezuelans that will regularize nearly 1 million migrants and grant all migrants a permit of stay and access to the labor market and health and education services for up to ten years.
In this discussion organized by the World Bank and the Migration Policy Institute, leading officials from the Western hemisphere will examine national and regional efforts to integrate Venezuelans in ways that maximize their human-capital contributions and ability to drive economic growth in their host countries. The discussion will also consider how the international community can mobilize to transform this crisis into a development opportunity for the region.
Simultaneous Spanish interpretation will be available.
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For more information:
[email protected] | 202-266-1929 | www.migrationpolicy.org
Migration Policy Institute
1275 K St. NW, Suite 800
Washington, DC xxxxxx
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