Social protection is a universal human right and a key element of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. While this right unequivocally applies to migrants, irrespective of migration status, migrant women in particular often remain excluded. Against this backdrop, this policy brief discusses the barriers that migrant women face in accessing social protection and provides recommendations for States to meet their obligation to overcome these, particularly in relation to health care, maternity protection and essential services for victims and survivors of violence.
Leave No Migrant Behind: The 2030 Agenda and Data Disaggregation
Migrants in vulnerable situations
Halfway to the U.S.: A Report from Honduras on Migration - WOLA
Far-reaching reforms in Oman set new benchmark for social protection in the region
Gender-responsive and age-sensitive social protection
10 Social Policy Examples (2024)
U.S. Detention of Child Migrants
UNHCR Northern Europe
SDG Migration data portal
Addressing the Sustainable Development Goals Leave No One Behind Promise: Migration and Health
U.S. Strategy - Ford Foundation