Migrants and Refugees: Europe in the World and How the World Sees Europe
Abstract
The world is moving. During the last forty years, international migration has been multiplied by 4, from 77
millions in 1975 to 258 now, as well as internal migrants (740 millions). China itself has 240 millions of internal
migrants and half of them are illegal. This globalisation of migrations, defined by the involvement of quite all
countries in this process of departure, arrival and transit, is paradoxically accompanied by a regionalisation
process: in all regions in the world, there are more migrants coming from the same region than coming from
other parts of the world: this trend is due to the emerging presence of new comers alike refugees, women,
unaccompanied minors, environmentally displaced migrants, internally displaced people who rarely go far.
This regionalisation of migration can be observed in all regions in the world (Euro-Mediterranean, Northern
Americas, Southern America, Russia, Turkey, Gulf countries, Sub-Saharan Africa, South-East Asia, Australia).
In the past, the Europeans were many among the migrants in some of these regions. Europe has become a
continent of immigration even if it meets difficulties to accept this reality. With 77, 8 millions of migrants, Russia
and Ukraine included, Europe has become during these last thirty years one of the first destinations in the
world. But immigration does not belong to European identity, nor to national identities in European countries,
while emigration is part of many diasporic identities in European countries, because European used in the past
to migrate all over the worlds for various reasons. This situation, along with the crisis of European values of
solidarity and human rights in a period of economic crisis, explains the reluctance of many European countries, mostly at east, to welcome new comers and to accept with trust the proposal of Brussels of burden sharing.
Europe has been confronted with one of its major migration challenges with the refugee crisis of 2015 because
it difficultly thinks about itself as an immigration continent and because the public opinion has been worked
during years by the rise of extreme rightist movements and parties hostile to migration and refugees.