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Brown University, UMass-Boston partner MotM in launch of Migration Story Archive in French
Migrants of the Mediterranean (MotM), the global Humanitarian Storytelling organization, launches the Journey Story Archive in French, created in collaboration with the Brown University department of French and Francophone Studies and University of Massachusetts, Boston department of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures, which gives direct access to the organization’s collection of migration testimonies to the French-speaking public.
The first wave of the launch includes roughly 30 out of the more than 100 Journey Stories recorded in the MotM archives, detailing the harrowing journeys of survivors of human smuggling and trafficking, and human rights violations, primarily in Libya and the Central Mediterranean region, with further translations being released in the months ahead on a rolling basis, including those from the US-Mexico border zone.
The collaboration expands MotM’s impact in migrant rights advocacy in the academic sector, with new students and scholars having exposure to its primary source document collection and setting the foundation for humanizing the migration narrative.
It is a timely release, on the brink of the extreme-right Trump regime promising mass deportations; and a figure elected and fueled by a rush of fears and damaging stereotypes about the migrant community in the US and abroad.
“There is no question that by engaging with the sources, students are able to see beyond reductive news headlines to the migration stories hidden behind them,” said professors Claudia Esposito, Ph.D., of UMass-Boston and Stéphanie Ravillon, Ph.D., of Brown University.
Students’ direct engagement with the stories in the course of their translation work, guided and overseen by Esposito and Ravillon, means they have a corrected lens through which to understand the global migration phenomenon, through the words of the people who have made the journeys themselves.
“Students gained real-life insight into the psychological, physical and logistical challenges faced by migrants from Sub-Saharan Africa crossing the Mediterranean to Europe,” said Esposito. An advantage soon to be explored in the US-Mexico context, as MotM’s inaugural Journey Story reports from the Arizona-Mexico border zone are released in 2025.
The impact doesn’t end with linguistic studies alone.
“Going forward we envision using the Archive in courses about Contemporary Europe, Contemporary France as well as in language courses,” Esposito and Ravillon continued. “In all cases we believe students will benefit from the historical, social and linguistic content with which they are coming into contact.”
Driving scholarship is in fact one of the key areas of impact MotM is after.
“From the beginning our work caught the attention of scholars first,” said MotM Founder and CEO, Pamela Kerpius, “they just got it.”
The response was across the spectrum.
“Whether migration studies proper, or an Italian or French course where students and scholars needed new ways to connect with what was happening on the ground in Italy and the EU, and also now as we expand to US-Mexico” continued Kerpius, “MotM has been able to create positive, human-first connections that give the migration narrative true texture. And that influences how the next generation understands migration too.”
“That’s what we’re after,” Kerpius said, “Humanizing the migration phenomenon. And living without fear of people who are in an exceptionally vulnerable state.”
Preying on fears has been the defining characteristic of political rhetoric in the 2024 US election, and worldwide, particularly on the extreme-right.
“The French election in 2024 has served as a clear reminder that migrant communities continue to be instrumentalized,” said Esposito and Ravillon, something MotM works to combat.
“Despite their hardships, people in the migrant community are often depicted in the news and seen as a generic, faceless and dehumanized entity, mostly to be feared and avoided,” Esposito and Ravillon continued. “MotM contributes to making visible the real-life challenges faced by migrants, a profound and moving effort that can only serve to inform public discourse, which in turn may impact the political arena.”
The French Archive allows the organization to more completely represent the voices of its community, as well. It helps return the migration discourse back to the individual stories and insights of the people who understand it most—the people who originate from French-speaking countries, including Senegal, Guinea, Ivory Coast, Cameroon, Algeria and others.
“For the migrants whose stories have been translated,” said Ravillon, “it is an opportunity for their testimonies to be heard in one of their mother tongues, since many of them in fact come from countries where French is widely spoken.”
The presence of MotM in academia is not the first. It received a $15,000 community partnership in 2023 with Occidental College, as well as numerous engagements with other higher learning institutions, including the University of Toronto, Dartmouth College, Brandeis University, University of Washington, among many others, and creates a pathway for scholars to broaden the academic discourse in migration at a human level.
Additional impact in 2024 includes the citation of longtime MotM community member, Abraham (Nigeria), by UNHCR, IOM, and Mixed Migration Centre in their combined report on the risks of travel along the Central Mediterranean route. Its inclusion showcases the MotM value and impact when applied to the areas of policy, research and institutional advocacy.
Visit the Journey Story Archive in French, and read more about Migrants of the Mediterranean, now in the midst of its 6th Annual Holiday Fundraiser, on its website.
Migrants of the Mediterranean (MotM) is a Humanitarian Storytelling NGO documenting the individual Journey Stories of the world’s most impoverished and vulnerable people, first in Lampedusa, Sicily, across Italy and Europe, and now at the US southern border. The organization’s Humanitarian Storytelling methodology is a hybrid of humanitarianism, journalism and contemporary history creating an immediate impact for participants in its migrant community. It has resulted in dignifying the experiences of vulnerable people in the migrant community by way of compassionate encounter and documentation in effort of a more complete historical record since 2016.
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Nigeria leads Liberia, Ghana, others as US set to deport migrants
Nigerian has the highest number of West African migrants set to be repatriated from the US.
The United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) confirmed the removal of 110 Nigerians as part of a wider crackdown that will see 355 nationals from the sub-region returned home.
The DHS yesterday published names and photographs of all 355 individuals listed for deportation under its “WOW” West Africa Operations Watch initiative, reports The Guardian.
Nigeria accounts for 110 of those listed, second only to Liberia with 94, and far ahead of Ghana’s 30 and Senegal’s 19.
The list also includes 15 Cameroonians, 14 Gambians, 14 Ivorians, 12 Mauritanians, 11 Cape Verdeans, nine Burkinabes, eight Nigeriens, six Guineans, six Togolese, five Malians, and 1 each from Benin and Guinea-Bissau.
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Diaspora remittances point to untapped potential in crisis response: New IOM report
As diaspora remittances now outpace both official development assistance and foreign direct investment combined, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) today published a new paper showing how stronger engagement with diaspora communities can enhance humanitarian response and support recovery efforts worldwide.
The paper highlights how diaspora communities mobilize resources rapidly, reach affected populations through trusted networks, and deliver locally informed, culturally attuned solutions, yet remain only partially integrated into formal humanitarian systems.
“Diaspora communities are some of the most agile and trusted partners in crisis response,” said Ugochi Daniels, IOM Deputy Director General for Operations. “This paper shows how we can move beyond spontaneous solidarity to real, structured partnerships that strengthen local responses before, during and after crises. By connecting diaspora communities with humanitarian efforts, IOM helps ensure support gets to people quickly, effectively and with trust.”
Drawing on case studies from Haiti, Lebanon, the Philippines, Somalia and Ukraine, the report documents concrete results: the Ukrainian diaspora raised USD 283 million in the first year of the conflict, while over 100 diaspora organizations mobilized within days of Haiti’s 2021 earthquake.
These examples reflect a broader trend: in 2024, diaspora remittances to low- and middle-income countries reached an estimated USD 700 billion, surpassing official development assistance and foreign direct investment combined.
The report shows how structured diaspora engagement has supported preparedness, enabled lifesaving response and accelerated recovery through early warning systems, safer shelter and health services, innovative financing mechanisms and community-led recovery efforts.
The paper also outlines practical priorities for donors and partners, including flexible funding mechanisms, digital coordination tools, strengthened data partnerships, and tailored capacity-building support. It contributes to IOM’s broader efforts and informs a forthcoming IOM Diaspora Strategy that positions diaspora engagement as a core pillar across the Organization’s work.
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West and Central Africa urges more climate funding as displacement rises
Leaders across West and Central Africa are calling for more funding to help communities deal with climate change as floods, droughts and environmental degradation force more people to leave their homes, reshaping migration patterns and displacement across the region.
“Climate change is already affecting where and how people live. The challenge now is moving fast enough to deliver practical solutions and funding to vulnerable communities,” said Sylvia Ekra, IOM Regional Director for West and Central Africa. “Our region has shown leadership by including migration in climate policies. Now we must ensure climate funding reaches the communities most affected, so migration is a safe and informed choice – not a last resort.”
At a regional conference in Lagos, Nigeria, on 12–13 May, governments and partners developed a roadmap outlining practical ways to protect livelihoods and help communities adapt to climate impacts.
Climate shocks are already altering where and how people live across West and Central Africa. Floods, droughts and storms are damaging homes, roads and essential services across the region. By the end of 2024, about 2 million people in West and Central Africa had been displaced by disasters – around one fifth of the global total.
Environmental damage, desertification, and rising sea levels are also increasing pressure on communities and cities. The World Bank estimates that by 2050, up to 32 million people in the region could be forced to move within their own countries because of climate change.
The conference also highlighted growing action across the region. Most countries that recently updated their national climate plans now include migration and displacement issues. Côte d’Ivoire and Mauritania also joined the Kampala Ministerial Declaration on Migration, Environment and Climate Change, bringing the number of supporting African countries to 33.
“Climate-related human mobility is no longer a peripheral issue; it is an adaptation and resilience priority that must be negotiated, planned and financed accordingly,” said Nana Dr. Antwi‑Boasiako Amoah, Chair of the African Group of Negotiators. “The next step is to match that policy progress with credible data and accessible finance; so governments and partners can invest in solutions that reduce risk, protect livelihoods and expand safe options for people on the frontlines.”
Participants called for stronger early warning systems, more support for local adaptation efforts and better access to climate funding for affected communities, as part of a series of recommendations ahead of major global climate negotiations, including the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and COP31, which will take place in Türkiye later this year.
The Lagos Conference was co-hosted by the Government of Nigeria with support from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark through the Climate Change and Migration Data (CCMD) Programme.
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