MPI Webinar
                           
LIVECAST SIDE EVENT OF THE 

   

Preparedness for the Next Pandemic: Towards a Resilient Global Architecture on Borders and Health?


THURSDAY, MAY 19, 2022
2:30 P.M. CEST (Brussels, Berlin) / 1:30 P.M. WEST (Lisbon, Rabat) / 8:30 A.M. ET (New York, DC)

SPEAKERS:
António Vitorino, Director General, International Organization for Migration

Zsuzsanna Jakab, Deputy Director-General, World Health Organization

Blas Nuñez-Neto, Acting Assistant Secretary, Border and Immigration Policy, Department of Homeland Security, United States

Carlos Bernardo Abad Santos, Assistant Secretary for Policy and Planning, National Economic and Development Authority, Philippines

Justine Saunders, Deputy Secretary and Chief Operating Officer (COO), Department of Home Affairs, Australia

Lucas Gómez, Head of the Office for the Attention and Socioeconomic Integration of Migrants, Colombia

Charles Munyao, Secretary, National Coordination Mechanisms on Migration, Kenya

Justin Maeda, Principal Regional Collaborating Centres Coordinator, Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention

Laurel Townhead, Representative (Human Rights & Refugees), Quaker United Nations Office

 

MODERATOR:
Andrew Selee, President, Migration Policy Institute

Location
MPI LIVESTREAM VIA UN TV
  
   

Two years after COVID-19 halted cross-border mobility in its tracks, most countries are seeking to fully restart migration and mobility. Sweeping border closures and travel bans have largely been phased out in favor of more targeted approaches, and many governments, travel operators, and ports of entry are lifting or loosening health-related restrictions. Yet the process of reopening has been highly uneven, unequal, and uncoordinated. Even now, inconsistent standards for testing and vaccination, as well as incompatible health credentialing systems, continue to confuse and burden travelers. Moreover, widespread inequalities in vaccine access and take-up are hindering efforts to outpace the virus as it mutates, and exacerbating inequities in who can move.

The International Migration Review Forum (IMRF) poses a timely opportunity to revisit the lessons of COVID-19, before the next variant arrives, including what costs and inequalities emerged in the pandemic era and what systems are needed to prepare for the next outbreak. Perhaps most importantly, the time is ripe to move towards a global agreement on mobility—a more resilient architecture for borders and health. With the World Health Organization (WHO) efforts to negotiate a new pandemic treaty and revise the International Health Regulations, leadership is needed to put mobility on the agenda and build global consensus on mobility management in times of pandemics. This IMRF side event, featuring the Director General of the International Organization for Migration, WHO Deputy Director General, and key national government stakeholders among others, will seek to foster greater international coordination over health and mobility and promote a set of principles that are clear, equitable, streamlined, and future-focused. 
    

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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