Our Concrete Actions

Disruptive Action: No business as usual whilst the world is burning

We are used to operating in these spaces solely to discuss issues with governments, trade good policies, practices and make recommendations. We can still do this, but we must also remind them that dialogues —often technical in nature —cannot happen in a vacuum.

We must ensure that no one forgets the wider context of our discussions- that our fundamental human rights as migrants, diaspora, grassroots communities, human rights defenders, and civil society organisations are being significantly eroded. We must ensure that all participants do not forget that the world outside is regressing backwards.

What we do
Action 1

A reminder of their past commitments

CS delegation members display quotes of commitments and goals from key leaders in past GFMDs, reminding all participants of what was aspired to and how far from it we are – where are we now?

This will be displayed in three ways:

  • Printed on ‘race bibs’ that can be attached to our clothing (to be confirmed)
  • Printed on posters that CS delegates will display prominently.
  • A graphically designed handout that CS delegates will distribute to other participants and post online, with quotes organised by theme.
What we do
Action 2B

A reminder of the world outside- sounding the alarm

The CSM will put up posters/projections of images in well-trafficked areas of migrant rights violations ongoing (e.g. immigration raids separating children from parents, inhumane conditions in immigration detention, violence at borders, exclusion), accompanied by one of two questions/statements:

  • Is this development?
  • This is how public money is spent
What we do
Action 3

A reminder of all those left behind – sounding the alarm

Members of the CS delegation (as many as possible) will take off and leave their shoes outside of selected prominent sessions, to symbolise all those being left behind, both outside of decision-making spaces, as well as from meaningful consideration and participation in government and governance policies. This can be accompanied by a poster or banner to explain the symbolism.

Structure and Goal

To lay out a manageable set of concrete, actionable demands from civil society to ‘course-correct’ and reform international migration governance and discourse