A baseline assessment is a sub-component of mobility tracking. It aims to collect data on IDP, migrant or returnee population presence in a defined administrative area of the country.
The dataset presents findings from key informant interviews conducted in Kyrgyzstan using the International Organization for Migration's (IOM) Mobility Tracking Matrix (MTM) system. Adapted from IOM's Global Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM) methodology, MTM aims to collect and analyze data to understand the mobility, vulnerabilities, and needs of displaced and mobile populations for evidence-based migration management.
Missing Migrants Project draws on a range of sources to track deaths of migrants along migratory routes across the globe. Data from this project are published in the report “Fatal Journeys: Tracking Lives Lost during Migration,” which provides the most comprehensive global tally of migrant fatalities since 2014.
What is included in Missing Migrants Project data?
Missing Migrants Project counts migrants who have died at the external borders of states, or in the process of migration towards an international destination, regardless of their legal status. The Project records only those migrants who die during their journey to a country different from their country of residence.
Missing Migrants Project data include the deaths of migrants who die in transportation accidents, shipwrecks, violent attacks, or due to medical complications during their journeys. It also includes the number of corpses found at border crossings that are categorized as the bodies of migrants, on the basis of belongings and/or the characteristics of the death. For instance, a death of an unidentified person might be included if the decedent is found without any identifying documentation in an area known to be on a migration route. Deaths during migration may also be identified based on the cause of death, especially if is related to trafficking, smuggling, or means of travel such as on top of a train, in the back of a cargo truck, as a stowaway on a plane, in unseaworthy boats, or crossing a border fence. While the location and cause of death can provide strong evidence that an unidentified decedent should be included in Missing Migrants Project data, this should always be evaluated in conjunction with migration history and trends.
What is excluded?
The count excludes deaths that occur in immigration detention facilities or after deportation to a migrant’s homeland, as well as deaths more loosely connected with migrants´ irregular status, such as those resulting from labour exploitation. Migrants who die or go missing after they are established in a new home are also not included in the data, so deaths in refugee camps or housing are excluded. The deaths of internally displaced persons who die within their country of origin are also excluded. There remains a significant gap in knowledge and data on such deaths. Data and knowledge of the risks and vulnerabilities faced by migrants in destination countries, including death, should not be neglected, but rather tracked as a distinct category.
The dataset presents findings from surveys conducted in Kyrgyzstan using the International Organization for Migration's (IOM) Mobility Tracking Matrix (MTM) system. Adapted from IOM's Global Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM) methodology, MTM aims to collect and analyze data to understand the mobility, vulnerabilities, and needs of displaced and mobile populations for evidence-based migration management.
The surveys were conducted with return migrant workers using IOM’s Mobility Tracking Matrix (MTM) system in Tajikistan. The survey locations were selected based on the results of IOM’s Baseline Mobility Assessment on returning migrant workers. The datasets include findings on socio-economic profile, migration experience, employment and remittances.
This data has been produced by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) on behalf of the Humanitarian Country Team and partners. The data provides the Humanitarian Country Team’s shared understanding of the crisis, including the most pressing humanitarian need and the estimated number of people who need assistance. It represents a consolidated evidence base and helps inform joint strategic response planning.
This dashboard monitors the population movements in Northern Syria in non-governmental areas. The data is collected from # communities and # IDP camps in the targeted area by the ACU field enumerators and triangulated with various sources like the local councils and humanitarian organizations to ensure the maximum level of accuracy. The baseline was set by cross-checking the population numbers from ACU Population Monitoring and HNAP statistics.
RESIDENT POPULATION: Resident populations are individuals or households living in a location and are neither displaced nor newly returned (in the current calendar year).
INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSONS (IDPs): individuals who have been forced to flee their location of origin to another location within Syria for at least one month.
RETURNEES: are individuals who returned to their community of origin within the calendar year and have stayed for at least one month after having previously fled for at least one month.
Newly INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSONS (N-IDPs): individuals who have been forced to flee their location of origin to another location within Syria, and at the time of the data collection, their stay in the displacement sites did not exceed one month.
Departures: individuals who were not in their original locations during the data collection period and had left their locations for about a month.
DTM REMAP implements the Baseline Mobility Assessment (BMA) in Tajikistan to track mobility, provide information on population estimates, geographic distribution of migrant workers and return migrants, reasons for migration and countries of return. Data is collected at the village level from key informants and direct observations.
In Peru, according to official sources, between January and September of 2017, in the border crossing CEBAF Tumbes, more than 103,000 Venezuelan were registered entering, of which, more than 64% entered after June. Likewise, in the PCF of Santa Rosa, on the southern border, a total of 47,342 Venezuelan exits to Chile were registered up to October of this year.
The current increase in migratory flows imposes the need to carry out an exhaustive monitoring of it in order to promote an orderly migration, safe and in human conditions - hand in hand with the stakeholders-. Thus, there is a need to know a profile of the Venezuelan migrant, the characteristics and dynamics of the migratory route.
The DTM Round 1 had questions related to Profile of Venezuelan migrant, Migratory status, Migratory route, Place of transit, Difficulties on the route, Situation in the transit country and others fields.
This Data is about IDP, returnees from CAR (previous IDP) and returnees from other countries repartition by origin and period of displacement and between 2013 and the date of assessment.
Evaluation has been run in 6 prefectures (admin1), 16 sub-prefectures (admin2) and 367 localities.
Full dataset of the RMRP 2024 Update, including activities, partners, population projections, people in need, and target estimates disaggregated by age and gender, population type at Admin 1 level.
More info on the R4V website: https://www.r4v.info/en/data
Ce jeu de données, validé par la commission des mouvements de population, donne l'historique des PDIs (Personnes Déplacées Internes) et Réfugiés par sous-préfecture.
This dataset provides information on internally displaced persons (IDP) movements and spontaneous IDP returns estimations on a monthly basis. In each resource, there is a summary table for IDP arrival estimations at the governorate level since January 2016. Each resource also includes a summary table for spontaneous IDP returns estimations at the governorate level since August 2018.
The dataset contains IDPs, Returnees and Refugees at sub national level with information on IDPs in camps and host communities.
IOM set up and rolled out the first round of the DTM in November 2015 with the objective of providing regular, accurate and updated information on displaced populations within the Far North region of Cameroon to better support the response of the Government of Cameroon and the humanitarian community.
The dataset contains IDPs, returnees at sub national level. The dataset also has reason of displacement, origin and dates of multiple displacements.
The context of displacement in Mali remains complex and fluid. Movements of IDPs currently residing in the southern regions to the northern regions continue to be reported. While some have indicated that they have returned definitively, other IDPs say they travel back and forth between the place of travel and the place of origin.
In the humanitarian context / humanitarian profiling, it demonstrates a strong evidence base, positive impact on resource allocation, and forms the basis and reference point of any relief operation aiming to deliver aid according to the population’s needs.
This data gives the total size of population for Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe states (BAY) and disaggregated by sex and age (SADD) for each population category.
The population category is grouped into:
• Internally displaced people (IDP)
• Returnees
• Host community
• Inaccessible areas
A village assessment survey (VAS) is a sub-component of mobility tracking. It collects data on returning IDPs, IDPs, returned migrants and host community members. VAS evaluates the absorption capacity of villages to receive returning IDPs with a focus on accessibility of services, livelihoods and reintegration.
This data has been produced by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) on behalf of the Humanitarian Country Team and partners. The data provides the Humanitarian Country Team’s shared understanding of the crisis, including the most pressing humanitarian need and the estimated number of people who need assistance. It represents a consolidated evidence base and helps inform joint strategic response planning.
iMMAP localiza a los refugiados y migrantes venezolanos en América Latina mediante el uso de la "Application Programming Interface (API)" de datos publicitarios de Facebook. Mostrando las conexiones de cuentas de usuarios de Facebook que muestra dónde vivían en su país de origen y ahora viven en el extranjero.
Los datos de la API de Facebook se recolectan cada 15 días. Las estimaciones que se presentan en este documento se obtienen utilizando filtros específicos y basándose en el comportamiento de los usuarios de Facebook durante los últimos 30 días.
Los estimados presentados no están diseñados para coincidir con censos u otras fuentes oficiales. Facebook no proporciona censos o estadísticas en línea sobre refugiados y migrantes. En consecuencia estas estimaciones deben considerarse como una fuente de datos que puede utilizarse para la triangulación y la identificación de tendencias. Facebook sólo proporciona información sobre determinados grupos de población (en este caso los expatriados venezolanos). No proporciona datos estadísticos o históricos.