Abstract
Subnational and international migration flows are becoming a growing problem for the United Nations and its member states. Four categories of migration—forced, voluntary, subnational and international—are used here as a framework for discussing the UN's half-century of efforts, manifested in the creation of specialized agencies, Security Council resolutions and international conferences. The paper concludes with a discussion of how current and future migration flows will be likely to affect and be affected by UN actions.
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