Migration Research Portal
This research portal profiles the work of the Research Cluster on International Migration and Human Security at the Institute of Social Studies (ISS). We provide links to selected publications of cluster members, migration-related projects and teaching programmes at the ISS.
Photo © Sebastião Salgado - Migrations: Humanity in Transition
In addition to the work of the cluster, we provide information about other books, journals, networks and events that are of interest to us.
About the ISS Research Cluster
The Research Cluster on International Migration and Human Security studies the links between migration and social change, focussing on different levels of interactions that contribute to the shaping of different migration systems and their implications for migrants’ wellbeing.
We seek to contribute to new understandings about migration in a global age by working across national boundaries, using a multi-sited approach and collaborating with regional and global research networks to share experiences. We are primarily concerned with how research can impact on policy developments in ways that address aspects of social justice more coherently.
Members of the Cluster
The interests of the cluster members are diverse. We intend to maintain this diversity and will bring different perspectives and research interests together in a mutually supportive manner. The cluster remains open to new members and we will keep the lines of research flexible so that new members can determine more easily how they can situate their research interests and develop organic links with us.
Issues Addressed and Approaches Taken
This research cluster addresses issues of migration and development from the perspective of social justice. Members of the cluster are working on questions of means in policy approaches as well as questions of ethical ‘ends’. The cluster works with Human Rights, Human Development and Human Security as three aspects of an inter-connected approach, which is centred on the protection of human dignity as the main goal.
The cluster adopts a multi-site research strategy, considered necessary for the subject of migration which involves multiple locales – sending, transit and receiving. We analyse and compare the complexity of different locales and situate and embed issues of human security and their meanings in a contextual manner. The aim is to generate new findings and reflections that are helpful to policy in making well-considered judgements and policy decisions.
The cluster organized an international conference on international migration, multi-local livelihoods and Human Security on 30-31 August 2007. This conference was supported by the Centre for Human Security Studies at Chubu University in Japan, the International Institute for Asian Studies, The Hague Municipality and Oxfam-Novib in the Netherlands. The cluster is engaged in a number of collaborative externally funded activities to enhance human resources in higher education through international collaboration in research and teaching in migration studies.
The current thematic issues covered by the cluster are:
- Forced Migration, Human Trafficking and State Policies
- Migration and Development Nexus: Critical Perspectives on Multi-Local Livelihoods, Social Networks and Remittances
- Human Security and Migration in a Global Age: Re-invigorating Development Ethics
- Migration, Culture and Urban Governance: Citizenship-in-Practice


