Justice and care for migrant women
07 March 2012
In its report The female face of migration: advocacy and best practices for women who migrate and the families they leave behind, Caritas documents the challenges faced by some of over 104 million women who are seeking opportunities outside their homelands and travelling independently from their families.
Credits: Caritas
More women than ever before are migrating alone in search of a better life, but 
Caritas Internationalis says systems aren¡¦t in place to prevent them from being 
exploited or abused. In a report published today, Caritas says governments and 
social services dealing with migration need to address migrant women¡¦s needs. 
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In its report The 
female face of migration: advocacy and best practices for women who migrate and 
the families they leave behind, Caritas documents the challenges faced 
by some of over 104 million women who are seeking opportunities outside their 
homelands and travelling independently from their families. Some find better 
jobs, education opportunities and greater freedoms. But too frequently on their 
journey and upon arrival they are cheated, abused, raped or discriminated 
against. 
¡§We urgently need to change the way we think about women¡¦s migration,¡¨ says 
Caritas Internationalis Advocacy and Policy Director Martina Liebsch, ¡§because 
the current system is failing to protect women who migrate.¡¨ 
¡§The maltreatment of migrant women is often invisible,¡¨ Liebsch says. ¡§It takes 
place in people¡¦s homes, where domestic workers are beaten, go unpaid or made to 
work unreasonable hours. It takes place in brothels, where traffickers sell 
women into forced prostitution. It takes place on farms, where women are bonded 
into labour contracts that amount to little more than modern slavery. It takes 
place in urban areas, where women from rural areas are maltreated, underpaid, 
and abused. And it takes place during the migration journey, when smugglers take 
advantage of women¡¦s vulnerability.¡¨ 
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Caritas wants female migrants to be able to migrate in security and safety. 
Caritas calls for countries to adopt measures that will protect women, including 
pre-departure counseling, refugee registration, and labour inspection. 
Governments should review migration policies to assess their impact on female 
migrants. 
Caritas wants more care for families in which the mother is separated from her 
children. ¡§Many women leave children behind, sometimes to take care of other 
people¡¦s children abroad,¡¨ says Liebsch. ¡§Left with relatives, their own 
children grow up without a mother. We need policies that keep families together 
at best--and at the least offer social protection to the children left behind.¡¨ 
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Women who flee from terrible work situations, and even torture, risk going to 
jail when their work permit is tied to the employer who has abused them. Caritas 
wants female migrants, whatever their legal status, to be able to seek redress 
and claim their basic human rights. 
Migrant women have a lot to offer their own countries and the countries where 
they work. ¡§Female migrants are not victims by nature but are victims of 
inequitable systems, prejudices and abuse,¡¨ says Liebsch. ¡§It¡¦s time we value 
their contribution by making migration policies favorable for them and by 
protecting them.¡¨ 
For more information, please contact Patrick Nicholson on 0039 334 359 0700 or nicholson@caritas.va