What are the elements of a national integration policy?

During the Roundtable meeting we organised in the context of the ‘Malta Integration Network’ project, participants were encouraged to discuss the key elements for a successful national TCN integration policy.  We had 3 active workshops and a plenary session that drew on the best practices of other EU MS in order to highlight the steps we can recommend Malta to adopt in its policy formulation process.

You can now request all documentation relating to this event and we’d be happy to share it.

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The Networking Roundtable Meeting of the Malta Integration Network project

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On Friday, 8 November, aditus foundation held its Networking Roundtable Meeting, the culmination of the first phase of the Malta Integration Network(MIN) project for the integration of third-country nationals (TCNs) in Malta.

The meeting’s invited guests, that is, local and international integration stakeholders, reflected MIN’s collaborative governmental, academic, public and civil society dialogue on the best practices for ensuring the full inclusion and participation of TCNs in their adopted countries — for the sake, ultimately, of introducing such integration practices in Malta, which currently lacks any formal, national integration policy.

The meeting gathered representatives from, for example, the Portuguese High Commission for Immigration and Intercultural Dialogue, the University of Leiden (Netherlands), the Austrian Integration Fund, Italy’s UNAR (National Office Against Racial Discrimination), Migrant Voice from the UK, Denmark’s Council for Ethnic Minorities, the Integration Centre from Ireland, and the Migration Policy Group and European Council on Refugees and Exiles from Belgium. The participants from Malta included representatives from TCN communities, the National Commission for the Promotion of Equality, the Employment and Training Corporation, SOS Malta, the Faculty for Social Well-being at the University of Malta, and Claudine Buttigieg, MP and Opposition Spokesperson for Civil Liberties.

The participants explored integration best practices through workshops on education and vocational training, political participation, and regulatory bodies and institutional responsibilities. These were followed by plenary and panel discussions on international integration strategies and successes.

The innovative MIN project, founded in January of this year and soon to enter its second phase, will continue to build on its findings to date — and the lessons of last week’s Networking Roundtable Meeting — to produce concrete and sustainable recommendations and the establishment of integration indicators for the key frontline service providers working with TCNs in Malta. The indicators will provide monitoring and coordination tools to improve, measurably and formally, the overall level of TCN integration and support.