Thomas Huddleston, EU support for Integration: what about beneficiaries of International Protection? A User's Guide to EU Standards, Funds and Cooperation, Migration Policy Group (MPG), 14 April 2010, https://www.refworld.org/reference/regionalreport/mpg/2010/97645 [accessed 30 April 2026]
This paper considers the potential contribution that regularized labour migration could make to UNHCR's understandings of durable solutions for refugees. It considers the limits of the three traditional durable solutions. It also looks into the potential benefits regularised labour migration could offer to UNHCR's durable solutions framework. Further, it considers the obstacles to the implementation of solutions base on regularised labour, particularly state resistance and the susceptibility of such labour migrants to fluctuations in economic demand.
Katy Long, Extending protection? Labour migration and durable solutions for refugees, Research Paper No. 176, UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), October 2009, https://www.refworld.org/reference/research/unhcr/2009/86930 [accessed 30 April 2026]
This paper examines the main elements and limitations of the ECOWAS free movement protocols. It evaluates the degree to which the protocols have been implemented in ECOWAS member states and identifies their utility to refugees from ECOWAS countries residing in other ECOWAS countries. It queries whether the protocols constitute a sound legal basis for member states to extend residence and work rights to refugees with ECOWAS citizenship residing in their territories who are willing to seek and carry out employment. It specifically looks at Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees to achieve the legal aspects of local integration in West Africa.
Aderanti Adepoju, Alistair Boulton & Mariah Levin, Promoting integration through mobility: free movement and the ECOWAS Protocol, Research Paper No. 150, UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), December 2007, https://www.refworld.org/reference/research/unhcr/2007/78362 [accessed 30 April 2026]
This guide focuses on the legal process and framework, which is in many ways a pre-requisite for the realization of the other dimensions of successful integration. It is a process which should lead to permanent residence rights and ultimately, the acquisition of citizenship. Beyond securing legal rights, the economic and socio-cultural dimensions of life in the country of asylum are also integral to successful integration. As such, the recommended standards set out in this guide will reflect the importance for refugees of attaining a growing degree of self-reliance, being able to pursue sustainable livelihoods and contributing to the economic life of the host country.
Rosa da Costa, Rights of Refugees in the Context of Integration: Legal Standards and Recommendations, Research Paper No.12, UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), June 2006, https://www.refworld.org/reference/lpprs/unhcr/2006/39551 [accessed 30 April 2026]
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR); Division of Operational Support (DOS), Handbook for Planning and Implementing Development Assistance for Refugees (DAR) Programmes, -, UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), January 2005, https://www.refworld.org/policy/opguidance/unhcr/2005/20073 [accessed 30 April 2026]