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5 May 2014 - Forum 2014 - Lunch Debate: Migration. OECD Headquarters, Paris, France.
Moderator: Ali Aslan, TV Host & Journalist, Deutsche Welle, Germany
Speakers
- Laima Andrikiene, Member, European Parliament
- Daniela Bobeva, Deputy Prime Minister for Economic Development, Republic of Bulgaria
- Chukwu-Emeka Chikezie, Director, Up!-Africa Limited
- Paul Collier, Director, Centre for the Study of African Economies, Professor of Economics and Public Policy,
Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
- Karl Cox, Vice-President, Public Policy and Corporate Affairs, Europe, Middle East and Africa, Oracle France
- Jean-Christophe Dumont, Head, International Migration, Employment, Labour and Social Affairs, OECD
- Omar Munie, Designer, Omar Munie Clothing
- Jan Niessen, Director, Migration Policy Group
- Young-bum Park, President, Korea Research Institute for Vocational Education and Training (KRIVET)
For more information, visit: www.oecd.org/Forum
Photo: OECD/Marco Illuminati
The Dialogue held on 26 September 2017, was attended by more than a hundred people including, representatives from various ministries, embassies, academics, researchers, employers and workers representatives, civil society organizations.
The meeting continued the implementation of the India-EU Common Agenda on Migration and Mobility (CAMM) signed last year, and comes ahead of the upcoming India-EU Summit to be held in Delhi in October 2017. The CAMM addresses four pillars: better organized regular migration and the fostering of well-managed mobility; prevention of irregular migration and trafficking in human beings; maximizing the development impact of migration and mobility; and promotion of international protection.
Deputy Assistant Secretary, Bureau for Population, Refugees and Migration, United States of America.
© IOM 2012
is going on right NOW, baby!
At least it is in my neck o' the woods.
Check this page to see if you're on one of the migration routes, and you can use this page to figure out when you might normally expect to see them. (Or, you know, go outside and look around every now and then in the fall.)
The peak migration for my area is supposed to be September 24 - October 6. I've definitely had plenty of monarchs in my yard for the last several weeks, but they weren't noticeably migrating: there was no southwestern flight pattern apparent, just a random circling of the garden, and a lazy flapping from flower to flower. I started thinking that maybe I just wouldn't recognize the migration when it happened. Wrong-o. It's going on right now! I opened the back door Thursday morning (October 8) to let Max out, and checked out the wildlife as usual: instead of the hummingbird and 3 or 4 monarchs that I've grown used to seeing, there was a hummingbird and sixteen (that's SIXTEEN!!!) Monarchs just on the white Buddleia and the milkweed right outside my back door.
I was transfixed.
I was spending the morning trying to complete a Stats project (due at 5 pm that day), and i really didn't have the time for any kind of butterfly-watching, but I couldn't help it. I grabbed my camera and headed outside.
They were everywhere. I stared, open-mouthed, at the buddleia/milkweed combo, covered in butterflies, and then I turned around: they were all over the rest of the yard, too. The pink butterfly bush, the milkweed, the lantana, the chaste tree, the tithonia; all were covered in monarchs. They scattered when i got close, and the photos from more than a couple of feet away don't let you see the butterflies, so i settled for lots of solo shots. None of the sky shots turned out, but there were constantly monarchs fluttering over my head, too, all headed southwest. It was amazing to watch.
I snapped all of these in the course of about 10 minutes.
Oil on canvas paper, digital painting using Intuos3 and Photoshop.
Commissioned by Dan Rhoads of the blog Migrations.
There is also a "making of" in two parts at The Flying Trilobite:
Head on over and check out Migrations!
The annual shorebird migration from the Arctic to South America with a resting period in the mud flats of the Bay of Fundy.
The Dialogue held on 26 September 2017, was attended by more than a hundred people including, representatives from various ministries, embassies, academics, researchers, employers and workers representatives, civil society organizations.
The meeting continued the implementation of the India-EU Common Agenda on Migration and Mobility (CAMM) signed last year, and comes ahead of the upcoming India-EU Summit to be held in Delhi in October 2017. The CAMM addresses four pillars: better organized regular migration and the fostering of well-managed mobility; prevention of irregular migration and trafficking in human beings; maximizing the development impact of migration and mobility; and promotion of international protection.
The new fish migration camera at Vattentorget. No live action during my most recent visit. The date on this photo/video says November 2024. Placed in the old Nils Ericson sluice at Norra slusskajen, it captures fish migrating between Saltsjön and Mälaren. In the background they are working on a new bridge for cyclists. All part of the gigantic Slussen project.
5 May 2014 - Forum 2014 - Lunch Debate: Migration. OECD Headquarters, Paris, France.
Moderator: Ali Aslan, TV Host & Journalist, Deutsche Welle, Germany
Speakers
- Laima Andrikiene, Member, European Parliament
- Daniela Bobeva, Deputy Prime Minister for Economic Development, Republic of Bulgaria
- Chukwu-Emeka Chikezie, Director, Up!-Africa Limited
- Paul Collier, Director, Centre for the Study of African Economies, Professor of Economics and Public Policy,
Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
- Karl Cox, Vice-President, Public Policy and Corporate Affairs, Europe, Middle East and Africa, Oracle France
- Jean-Christophe Dumont, Head, International Migration, Employment, Labour and Social Affairs, OECD
- Omar Munie, Designer, Omar Munie Clothing
- Jan Niessen, Director, Migration Policy Group
- Young-bum Park, President, Korea Research Institute for Vocational Education and Training (KRIVET)
For more information, visit: www.oecd.org/Forum
Photo: OECD/Marco Illuminati
Photos from the MRN Our Vote campaign launch (www.our-vote.org)
Take at the Black Chronicles II exhibition at Rivington Place, London. autograph-abp.co.uk/exhibitions/black-chronicles-ii
Migration Museum, 11 December 2012
Members of Thomas (Tugomir) Mestrov's family turned out in force to see their paver.
Wildebeest Migration Serengeti, Tanzania
Shot with a Canon 5D w/ 600 mm f/4.0 IS lens & 1.4 X Extender
These three muskateers stand their ground in the middle of the road as we decend on them in our safari truck.
The massive crowd of wildebeest is amassed on the Maasai Mara during the July, 2011 great migration from Tanzania.
Migration of birds – geese and subluminal stimuli.
I’m happy, when I participate in being a witness of migration of birds, geese.
I’m very lucky fellow I’m living in Inverness, North Scotland where the gooses have their expressway. On the end of January the middle of February over my house thousands of birds traverses. Intensity is taking place in the morning. I was very pleasantly surprised when I discovered, that the gooses come around 8.10 am every day for a week, as an immense wave.
Amazing performance! I think that it is incredible, what distance those birds can cover, and also overcome problems, tiredness.
I think it is amazing what the gooses can see, meet and the big experience achieves.
I know that is the instinct, part of their live. Instinct, which gives them great opportunity to meet our world. Of course, most probably gooses don’t notice that.
But, what if?
What, if geese deeper the knowledge and experience. Birds watch world and see the changes that is happening. What, if they want to tell us something important, make us realize, enlighten.
From the last two years I was thinking about gooses as some kind messenger. I really like watching them; I am trying to take photos of their performances. The goose’s gaggling chains my attention. In my opinion gaggling is very pleasant, not like for example noise made by seagulls – screech.
The gooses cannot speak any of a human language. We cannot speak like gooses.
But, what if, the geese find a way to communicate with the people. Sings in the sky. What if, they created signs for us?
Maybe, the gooses want to share with us their experience and observations.
That idea comes whilst watching my photographs of gooses. Their bodies in the sky remind me of some kind of exotic language; Japanese, Chinese, Arabic, Indian or even Russian Cyrillic. Those sings, in my personal opinions are full of beauty and magic.
What if for hundreds of years the geese have been watching us and coexistence the gooses discovered what kind of signs is taking to the people?
Of course we are still too busy, living in stress, and we don’t pay attention, what is happening around us. We are losing our self.
My idea is going farther.
What if, the geese through subluminal stimuli pass us their experience and knowledge?
Maybe the geese are asking questions about something very important that matters?
Do you know, where is this everything going to? Do you know what you are doing? Maybe the geese shout to us: DON`T RUN LIKE THAT, LOOK AROUND YOU!
Furry Migration 2017 is a furry convention held in Minneapolis, Minnesota from August 25-27, 2017 at the Hyatt Regency Minneapolis
i stuck my camera out the window while i was driving... shouldn't do that, but who hasn't, really? lol...
In one of the most dramatic river crossings of recent years a mad rush of an estimated 30,000 wildebeest hurl themselves into the Mara River...in a desperate race (in the the wrong direction!) towards lush grazing to the south of the river.
Integrate humanitarian and migration perspectives in the search for appropriate responses to the migration consequences of complex crises.
© IOM 2012