Learning Report: Casablanca's Shifting Urban Context for Migrants

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Publication language
English
Pages
5pp
Date published
17 Aug 2020
Type
Case study
Keywords
Conflict, violence & peace, Development & humanitarian aid, Forced displacement and migration, Refugee Camps, humanitarian action, Current learning and evaluation, Urban
Countries
Morocco
Organisations
The Start Network

Migratory flows in Morocco have evolved over the past years as the Western Mediterranean Route to Europe via Morocco has become increasingly used by migrants, particularly West Africans. This is in part due to the increasing insecurity in Libya and Algeria and the risk associated with taking the Central Mediterranean Route. Though some migrants travel to Morocco for education or work opportunities, a large majority hope to continue their journey to Europe. The conditions migrants face along the route are difficult and often dangerous, involving smuggling networks, trafficking, slavery, and gender-based violence.

Between August 2018 and October 2019, the Migration Emergency Response Fund (MERF) funded three 3-month long projects in Morocco. Though available in 11 countries, the MERF contingency fund has been primarily used in Morocco, in part due to the described spikes in needs starting in 2018 and lack of other sources of funding.