Migrant Smuggling

• Migrant smuggling occurs globally.

• Demand for smuggling largely stems from limited opportunities for legal migration.

• Approaches to fight smuggling have failed to reduce crime and migrant deaths.

Updated •
November 21, 2023
Photo: Ggia / Wikimedia Commons
Overview

Migrant Smuggling: Brief Overview

Smugglers are known, especially in Western Europe and North America, as vicious criminals behind enterprises that threaten the security of nation-states and safety of migrants. Several reports tell of the ruthlessness of smugglers, who do not hesitate to abandon people in the desert or leave them on the high seas. Recent studies, however, have criticized popular generalisations and representations connected to the smuggling practice for being supported by little empirical data. While acknowledging the suffering and plight faced by smuggled migrants, they have dismissed the idea of smuggling as being constituted by large criminal organizations and also showed the complicity of increasingly punitive migration policies in endangering migrants.

Migrant Smuggling: Brief Overview

Migrant Smuggling: Brief Overview
Photo: Swiatoslaw Wojtkowiak

The United Nations’ 2000 Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, and its accompanying Protocol Against the Smuggling of Migrants,<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">defines</span><div class="popover">Source:<br><br><div>United Nations. United Nations Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime and The Protocols Thereto. 2004.</div></div></span>smuggling as the facilitation, for financial or other material gain, of irregular entry into a country where the migrant is not a national or resident. This definition was introduced to distinguish migrant smuggling from human trafficking – namely, the act of transporting or coercing people in order to benefit from their work or service, typically in the form of forced labour or sexual exploitation.

Smugglers have earned a negative reputation, especially in Western Europe and North America, as being evil geniuses behind criminal trades that endanger the very security of nation-states and human predators waiting to exploit migrants’ need for assistance and their dreams for a better life. Several accounts report the recklessness of smugglers who do not hesitate to abandon human beings in the desert or sabotage their own vessels to force authorities to carry out rescues. In April 2015, for example, an overcrowded fishing boat capsized near the coast of Libya, causing the death of most of the eight hundred people stuck onboard. Survivors<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">claimed</span><div class="popover">Source:<br><br><div>The Guardian. Hundreds of migrants rescued from people traffickers in Mediterranean. 2015.</div></div></span>that smugglers locked most migrants in the hull and middle deck of the three-layered boat, trapping them when the boat sunk. EUROPOL<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">estimated</span><div class="popover">Source:<br><br><div>Europol and Interpol. Migrant Smuggling Networks: Joint Europol-INTERPOL Report. 2016.</div></div></span>that in 2015 alone, criminal networks involved in the facilitation of irregular migration have had an income of between 3 and 6 billion EUR; meanwhile the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">claims</span><div class="popover">Source:<br><br><div>Blancas Madrigal, D. Tráfico ilegal de migrantes en AL genera 7 mil mdd a la mafia: ONU. Cronica, 2017.</div></div></span>that in Central America and along the US-Mexico border that they generate 7 billion USD – a low estimate no doubt, according to UN officials.

While successful at mobilizing public opinion and policy makers, the idea of growing, powerful and sophisticated criminal networks of smugglers is seldom supported by empirical data. This popularized portrait of human smuggling most often comes from the experiences and data sources of government or law enforcement entities, or from victims whose experiences are so heinous that they can be easily turned into stereotypical cases. Recent empirical studies, however, are now<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">rebutting</span><div class="popover">Source:<br><br><div>Zhang, S., Sanchez, G. and Achilli, L. Crimes of Solidarity in Mobility: Alternative Views on Migrant Smuggling. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 2018.</div></div></span>the argument that smuggling is controlled by highly organized criminal networks and, some, even suggest that smuggling constitutes a grassroots form of support for people fleeing immediate danger and economic hardship. These<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">studies</span><div class="popover">Source:<br><br><div>Achilli, L. The “Good” Smuggler: The Ethics and Morals of Human Smuggling among Syrians. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 2018.</div><br><br><div>—</div><div>Ayalew Mengiste, T. Refugee Protections from Below: Smuggling in the Eritrea-Ethiopia Context. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 2018.</div><br><br><div>—</div><div>Khosravi, S. 'Illegal’ Traveller: An Auto-Ethnography of Borders. Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.</div></div></span>have also questioned typical portrayal of smugglers as predators and migrants as victims. Instead they show that the interactions between migrants and smugglers across the world can also involve a complex set of motivations that include friendship, affective, spiritual and even ideological motivations.

Reports have also widely documented the risks faced by smuggled migrants. Every year,<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source" >thousands of migrants die</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>International Organization for Migration. Migrant deaths and disappearances. Migration Data Portal, 2022.</div></div></span>during the course of  smuggling activities. Along most smuggling routes, migrants perish or are severely injured due to accidents, extreme terrain or weather conditions. Intentional killings by smugglers are also <span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">reported,</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants. 2018.</div></div></span>making this illegal trade a very violent business. The reported deaths — most of which occur along maritime smuggling routes — represent only the tip of the iceberg of the human cost that smuggled migrants ultimately suffer. Many migrant deaths<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">are likely to go unreported</span><div class="popover">Source:<br><br><div>International Organization for Migration. Migrant deaths and disappearances. Migration Data Portal, 2022.</div><br><br><div>—</div><div>United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants. 2018.</div></div></span>because they occur at sea or on remote overland routes. It should be noted, however, the dangers faced by smuggled migrants are also a<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">direct consequence</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>Achilli, L. and Kyle, D. Global Human Smuggling: control, complexity, and creativity in unauthorized mobility (forthcoming). John Hopkins University Press, 2023.</div></div></span>of the progressive tightening of border control and increasingly restrictive migration policies along the route. As smugglers are themselves wary of moving on hazardous ground, they seek to limit the chances of apprehension by employing<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source" >a variety of strategies</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants. 2018.</div></div></span>– such as setting off on longer and, therefore, more dangerous journeys, choosing unsafe points of crossing, and leaving migrants on their own during the crossing.

OVERVIEW

Migrant Smuggling Routes

There are multiple smuggling routes, whose length vary, from the crossing of borders between adjacent states to journeys stretching across several continents. Smuggling routes can also change rapidly. Multiple factors can lead to a rapid increase or decrease in the volume of smuggled migrants across a certain route.These include, but are not limited to, wars, poverty, political turmoil, and the fast-changing scenario of border control. While routes change, the locations where migrant smugglers offer their services tend to remain stable over time. These locations, known as “smuggling hubs”, can be large capital cities or remote villages where migrants wait for days, weeks, or even months as they attempt to cross borders.

Migrant Smuggling Routes

Migrant Smuggling Routes
Photo: Sandor Csudai

The smuggling of migrants is a global phenomenon that<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">affects</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants. 2018.</div></div></span>a large number of countries. Routes are multiple and can also involve the crossing of several continents – from internal African routes towards north and south Africa, to Asian and African routes towards Europe, the United States and the Middle East, or to wealthier countries in South-East Asia and the Pacific. It should be noted, however, that migrant smuggling often simply involves movement across the borders of two adjacent countries. For example, after the outbreak of the war in Syria in 2011, large numbers of Syrians<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">used smugglers</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>Human Right Watch. “Our Lives Are Like Death”. 2021.</div></div></span>both to go to and return from neighbouring countries – such as, Jordan, Turkey or Lebanon. Some countries can be the final destination for migrants, while others are transit areas where they stop, waiting to move on further. In many cases, there is no clear distinction between transit and destination countries. Libya, for example, has long been a destination country for migrants from Sub-Saharan Africa. However, the fall of the Gadhafi regime in 2011, and the ensuing political violence, turned the country into a crucial transit point to Europe.

Smuggling routes can also<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">change rapidly.</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants. 2018.</div></div></span> Multiple factors can lead to a swift change in the volume of smuggled migrants across a route. These include, but are not limited to: wars, poverty, political turmoil, and the fast-changing scenario of border control. For example, in 2015 (the year Russia & the US entered the conflict in Syria), the European Border and Coast Guard Agency, Frontex,<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">registered</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>FRONTEX. EU’s external borders in 2022: Number of irregular border crossings highest since 2016. 2023.</div></div></span>record numbers of irregular border crossings to Europe — around 1.2 million people (compared to 330,000 detected irregular border crossings in 2022). These were mostly Syrians, Afghans and other<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">asylum seekers who entered Europe</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>FRONTEX. General Report 2015. 2016.</div></div></span>via Turkey and Greece, mostly with the help of smugglers. A large share of these migrants have now made their way to EU Member States via the so-called Eastern Mediterranean route. The escalation of the Syrian conflict, the re-emergence of political instability in the region, and radical changes in transit countries’ border controls substantially increased the number of migrants traveling along this route, as well as the number of smugglers enabling their irregular journeys.

While routes change, the locations where migrant smugglers offer their services <span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">tend to remain stable</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants. 2018.</div></div></span>over time. These smuggling hubs can be large capital cities or remote villages where migrants wait for days, weeks, or even months as they attempt to cross borders, earn enough to live on, hire smugglers, secure food and shelter, find protection or decide to stay where they are. Istanbul and Izmir in Turkey, Tripoli in Libya, or Tijuana in Mexico have long been crucial  hubs in the changing landscape of migratory routes. 

In the long term, however, these transit hubs are also<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">susceptible to change</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants. 2018.</div></div></span>. Agadez in Niger, for example, has traditionally been a crucial transit point for smuggling flows, where smugglers have arranged transportation services towards North Africa for hundreds of thousands of migrants from West Africa and other regions. However, the closure of land borders following the outbreak of the COVID pandemic in 2020 and heightened surveillance by law enforcement agencies at both the Libyan and Algerian borders, contributed to the decline of Agadez and<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">led to the emergence</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>Fereday, A. Niger: routes shift amid post-covid increase in human smuggling. Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime, 2022.</div></div></span>of new transit hubs such as the city of Tahoua in Niger. Tahoua is easily accessible by the local transport system and advantageously located near the Algerian border.

OVERVIEW

Organizational Structure and Smuggling Methods

There are a number of different techniques that human smugglers use to move migrants across international borders. Generally, air routes are safer but more expensive than land and sea routes. Land crossings, however, remain the most widely travelled smuggling corridors. Either way, journeys are generally operated by smuggling networks made of small and independent groups that enter into partnership with one another for short periods. These groups have a flexible structure with roles that are neither integrated into rigid hierarchies nor bound by long-term agreements. Around these relatively loose and small organizations gravitate a considerable number of people – often locals – who work as freelancers.

Organizational Structure and Smuggling Methods

Organizational Structure and Smuggling Methods
Photo: Alixandra Fazzina / UNHCR

<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">Empirical research</span><div class="popover">Source:<br><br><div>United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants. 2018.</div><br><br><div>—</div><div>Achilli, L. and Kyle, D. Global Human Smuggling: control, complexity, and creativity in unauthorized mobility (forthcoming). John Hopkins University Press, 2023.</div><br><br><div>—</div><div>Zhang, S., Sanchez, G. and Achilli, L. Crimes of Solidarity in Mobility: Alternative Views on Migrant Smuggling. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 2018.</div></div></span>undertaken across the world has shown that human smuggling involves very different ways of doing things depending on the origin of the smugglers, the client group, and the smuggling route. Smuggling groups can vary from single-service providers to multi-service networks. 

Smuggling Group Structures: Single Service Providers

Single service providers are small groups that run border crossings and often have solid roots in local communities. <h6 class="textbox" font-size: 14px>Smuggling groups are the operative unites that run smuggling operations, from the crossing of national borders between two countries to journeys that involve the crossing of several continents. Professional smugglers are at the core of these groups. The bigger the smuggling group is, the larger is the number of people operating at different phases of the journey.</h6>They do not have ties within the migrants’ countries of origin, and the recruitment happens through intermediary groups. These groups generally serve migrants who travel alone, mostly legally, for most of their journey. Migrants would refer to smugglers only to cross a specific leg of their journey. In 2018, thousands of migrants and asylum seekers coming from Mexico and Central America<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">joined “migrant caravans”</span><div class="popover">Source:<br><br><div>Frank-Vitale, A. From Caravan to Exodus, from Migration to Movement. North American Congress on Latin America, 2018.</div></div></span>to travel independently to Tijuana or other border cities in northern Mexico where smugglers then arranged transportation to the other side of the border.

Smuggling Group Structures: Multi-service Networks 

At the other end of the spectrum, larger and wider-ranging networks have offshoots in migrants’ countries of origin. These organizations operate either land, air or sea routes and provide customers with a variety of services that range from border crossings to detention center releases. These types of migrant-smuggling services<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">are often used</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>Neske, M. Human smuggling to and through Germany. International Migration, 2006.</div></div></span>by migrants who are barred from legal entry to transit countries. In such cases, the smuggling of migrants occurs through a pre-organized, multi-stage process. It is worth pointing out, however, that even wide-ranging networks do not have the<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">sturdy hierarchical structure</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>Achilli, L. The “Good” Smuggler: The Ethics and Morals of Human Smuggling among Syrians. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 2018.</div><br><br><div>—</div><div>Campana, P. Out of Africa: The Organization of Migrant Smuggling across the Mediterranean. European Journal of Criminology, 2018.</div></div></span>that has been observed within military or larger criminal organizations, such as mafia groups. Rather, they are a chain of independently but closely interacting ‘stage coordinators’ who organize the migration process by outsourcing certain smuggling activities to local coordinators – often individuals with solid ties in the local community of transit countries. The latter, in turn, subcontract border crossings to the local service providers.

It should be added that both single service providers and multi-service networks often delegate some of the logistics to individuals who participate in smuggling ventures only<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">occasionally.</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants. 2018.</div></div></span> These are often locals who work as “freelancers” by providing a range of services to ensure that the smugglers can operate undisturbed. These services might include renting out their car or boats, sub-leasing their lands as points of departure or crossing, or selling goods such as life jackets.

Methods of Migrant Smuggling

There are<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">many different techniques</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants. 2018.</div></div></span>that migrant smugglers employ to move migrants across international borders. Generally air routes are safer, but more expensive than land and sea routes. Land crossings, however, remain the most widely travelled smuggling corridors. Overall, the methods used to smuggle migrants depend on a number of factors, such as border control, migration policies, cost of smuggling services, geography, and the personal relationship between smugglers and migrants. 

In the Mediterranean, for example, smugglers<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">capitalize</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants. 2018.</div></div></span>on the presence of aid and border control agencies, counting on the moral and legal obligations to assist migrants in distress at sea. They operate remotely and generally maintain contact by phone with migrants who pilot the boat. On the other hand, concealment and hiding is the most common strategy to smuggle people across the US-Mexico border – for example, border control is<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">circumvented</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants. 2018.</div></div></span>by moving migrants through desert areas or hiding them in concealed compartments in trucks, private vehicles, and freight trains.

Structure of and Personnel in Migrant Smuggling Organisations

Empirical evidence has also<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">demonstrated</span><div class="popover">Source:<br><br><div>Achilli, L. and Kyle, D. Global Human Smuggling: control, complexity, and creativity in unauthorized mobility (forthcoming). John Hopkins University Press, 2023.</div><br><br><div>—</div><div>Campana, P. Out of Africa: The Organization of Migrant Smuggling across the Mediterranean. European Journal of Criminology, 2018.</div><br><br><div>—</div><div>Pastore, F., Monzini, P. and Sciortino, G. Schengen’s soft underbelly? Irregular migration and human smuggling across land and sea borders to Italy. International Migration, 2006.</div></div></span>that smuggling groups operating across the globe are generally small and independent with roles that are not integrated into rigid hierarchies or bound by long-term agreements. These flexible organizations have, however, a few recurring figures that can be pinpointed. These include the group coordinator, who oversees the smuggling operations and the overall management of the organization; the recruiter, in charge of establishing contact between smugglers and migrants; and the ‘passeur’, responsible for escorting migrants across borders. A number of other figures participate in the business: forgers, enforcers, receivers, and drivers. Finally, these relatively loose and small organizations attract a considerable number of people – often locals – who work as freelancers. They could work for a fee, for example, as lookouts, by using lights to signal the presence of police forces patrolling shores or borders, or as costly taxi-drivers who take migrants to embarkation zones or stash houses. Embarkation zones are where migrants are loaded onto boats heading somewhere, e.g. Bodrum in Turkey (embarkation zone) for boats heading to Lesbos in Greece. Stash houses are where migrants are “stashed” (at times — other times they just hang around in the city or elsewhere), waiting for the next leg of the journey. The wait depends on a number of factors — money sent by the family to pay the smuggler, better weather conditions for making the crossing etc.).The loose structure of human smuggling makes it difficult to draw an accurate financial assessment of the phenomenon. In other words, it is difficult to define how much money flows into the pockets of smugglers as many and different actors benefit from the revenues generated by this business.

OVERVIEW

Characteristics of Migrants and Smugglers

Smuggled migrants are generally young men in their twenties and early thirties. However, smuggling women and children – either travelling alone or with their own household – is not uncommon. The relationship between smugglers and migrants ranges from altruistic assistance provided by family members or friends, to dynamics of exploitation based on the intent of hardened criminals. Although violence and abuse are recurring features of the migrant-smuggler relationship, the dangers faced by smuggled migrants are often a consequence of the progressive tightening of border control and increasingly restrictive migration policies.

Characteristics of Migrants and Smugglers

Characteristics of Migrants and Smugglers
Artwork: Johannes Kittel / UNODC, Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants2018

Smuggled migrants are generally young men in their twenties and early thirties. However, the smuggling of women and children – either travelling alone or with their own household – is<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">common</span><div class="popover">Source:<br><br><div>Achilli, L. ‘Protection’ on my own terms: human smuggling and unaccompanied Syrian minors. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 2022.</div><br><br><div>—</div><div>Sanchez, G. Women’s Participation in the Facilitation of Human Smuggling: The Case of the US Southwest. Geopolitics, 2016.</div></div></span>. The gender and age composition of smuggled migrants often depends on many factors, including the reasons they need to move. For example, communities escaping violence and armed conflict often travel in small family groups. 

<h6 class="textbox" >Smuggled migrants are generally young adult males, although large numbers of women and minors have been recorded along certain routes. The gender and age composition of smuggled migrant flows is influenced by the circumstances driving their mobility. In case of conflict, insecurity and environmental disasters, families often resort to smugglers.</h6>

The relationship between smugglers and migrants ranges from altruistic assistance provided by family members or friends to dynamics of exploitation based on the intent of hardened criminals. Although violence and abuse are recurring features of the migrant-smuggler relationship, trust and satisfaction toward the smuggler<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">seems to be</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>Achilli, L. ‘Protection’ on my own terms: human smuggling and unaccompanied Syrian minors. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 2022.</div></div></span>the rule rather than the exception among migrants and asylum seekers. Ethnographic data collected across origin and destination countries<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">seems to confirm</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>Zhang, S., Sanchez, G. and Achilli, L. Crimes of Solidarity in Mobility: Alternative Views on Migrant Smuggling. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 2018.</div></div></span>a general feeling of satisfaction with smuggling services among migrants. A<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">study</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>Slack, J. and Martínez D. E. What makes a good human smuggler? The differences between satisfaction with and recommendation of coyotes on the US—Mexico border. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 2018.</div></div></span>across the US-Mexico border examined the smuggler-migrant relationship by drawing on more than 1100 surveys with recent deportees in six Mexican cities. While only 45% of deportees reported that they would recommend their facilitator to friends and family members, 75% indicated being satisfied with the services.

Moreover, migrants also get involved in providing smuggling services to finance their own journey or accomplish other goals. Some North Korean migrants smuggled to South Korea, for example, have<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">willingly decided</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>Achilli, L. and Kyle, D. Global Human Smuggling: Buying Freedom in a Retreating World. John Hopkins University Press, 2023.</div></div></span>to become smugglers themselves to make money and protect their fellow migrants from the same abuses they had to endure during their irregular journey. 

Regardless, the social bonds, kinship, and friendship between smugglers and migrants do not always protect migrants against exploitation and violence, especially when it comes to collecting money and enforcing contracts. Several testimonies have<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">documented</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants. 2018.</div></div></span>the case of migrants being deceived, abused, or even coerced into human trafficking or forced to carry drug or other illicit goods by their smugglers. Telling of these dangers is the<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">high number of deaths</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>International Organization for Migration. Migrant deaths and disappearances. Migration Data Portal, 2022.</div></div></span>among smuggled migrants along two of the most deadliest corridors worldwide, the Mediterranean Sea and the US-Mexico border – respectively around 49% and 6.5% of the total migrant deaths (48500) recorded since 2014.

Furthermore, recent empirical<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">research</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>Achilli, L. The “Good” Smuggler: The Ethics and Morals of Human Smuggling among Syrians. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 2018.</div></div></span>suggests that interactions between migrant smuggling and other crimes is sometimes the result of the long term vulnerability and precariousness of migrants’ situations. For example, recent<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source" >studies</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>Sanchez, G. and Zhang, S. Rumors, Encounters, Collaborations, and Survival: The Migrant Smuggling–Drug Trafficking Nexus in the US Southwest. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 2018.</div></div></span>show how migrants from Mexico and other countries in Latin America carry drugs as temporary strategies to bypass controls along the US–Mexico border. A lack of financial resources often determines a migrant’s decision to exchange transportation of drugs, either for monetary compensation or in lieu of smuggling fees. In other words, while immediate danger or the search for better economic prospects can push migrants to embark on dangerous journeys, without adequate social and financial capital, the cost of the journey can lead migrants to devise new strategies for paying for their own travel, such as engaging in forced labor or moving drugs across borders.

OVERVIEW

Methods to Prevent Migrant Smuggling

The policy imperatives that have guided efforts to address human smuggling in much of the developed world and beyond remain overwhelmingly focused on implementing an approach that favours strict migration policies and increased support for border surveillance and controls. This approach, however, has been criticized for failing to combat the number of facilitators of human smuggling and reduce the number of migrant deaths. Suppose the intended goal is the suppression of smuggling networks. In that case, security measures might be effective if accompanied by other solutions, including the opening of new channels for legal entry and the reinforcement of existing ones for refugees and asylum seekers who make up a large share of smuggled migrants.

Methods to Prevent Migrant Smuggling

Methods to Prevent Migrant Smuggling
Police car near Hungary-Serbia border barrier / Photo: Bőr Benedek

Notwithstanding smugglers’ different modus operandi across major smuggling corridors, the policy imperatives that have guided efforts to address human smuggling in much of the so-called developed world and beyond, remain overwhelmingly focused on implementing an approach that favours strict migration policies and increased support for border surveillance and controls. In Europe, for example, the creation of the border agency, Frontex, in 2004 has been a clear step toward this path. EU members have further tried to tighten border controls and are shifting asylum responsibilities to third countries. Europe’s ongoing collaboration with the Libyan coastguard, to intercept and return scores of migrants and refugees to Tripoli, points precisely in this direction.

This approach has been criticized<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">for failing</span><div class="popover">Source:<br><br><div>Achilli, L. and Kyle, D. Global Human Smuggling: control, complexity, and creativity in unauthorized mobility (forthcoming). John Hopkins University Press, 2023.</div><br><br><div>—</div><div>Little, A. and Vaughan-Williams, N. Stopping boats, saving lives, securing subjects: Humanitarian borders in Europe and Australia. European Journal of International Relations, 2016.</div></div></span>to reduce the number of facilitators and number of migrant deaths. Studies have shown how the offshore model mentioned above has infringed upon the international and human rights standards set out for the protection of migrants and increases the risks faced by migrants . Even in the case of successfully preventing migrants from leaving transit countries, it has been<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">questioned</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>Amnesty International. No One Will Look for You’: Forcibly Returned from Sea to Abusive Detention in Libya. 2021.</div></div></span>whether this outcome would ultimately benefit them or aggravate their plight. Several human rights groups and international organizations have reported countless abuses and violence against migrants, perpetrated by local authorities in these countries. For example, a 2021<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">report</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>Amnesty International. No One Will Look for You’: Forcibly Returned from Sea to Abusive Detention in Libya. 2021.</div></div></span>by Amnesty International, highlighted how European states and institutions continue to provide material support and pursue migration policies which enable the Libyan authorities to detect migrants despite severe forms of physical violence against them which have shown no indication of diminishing over the past decade.

Author’s Note: Alternatives to Current Migrant Smuggling Methods

If the intended goal is to suppress smuggling networks and protect vulnerable migrants, security measures might be effective, only if, implemented judiciously and alongside other solutions. Against this background, collaborations with third countries should occur after a detailed human rights impact analysis and investigation of the impact on local political economies where anti-smuggling policies are implemented. Careful considerations must be made to ensure that third country partners’ migration management activities do not impede individuals’ right to seek asylum. It should cease any assistance from developed countries to countries where migrants face the risk of inhumane and degrading treatment; meanwhile return operations of migrants must not be used as a deterrent to irregular migration and human smuggling. Furthermore, collaboration with transit countries should be expanded to increase their capacity to properly carry out refugee status determination and provide international protection, while taking into account age, gender and diversity specific vulnerabilities and protection challenges. 

Most importantly, the fight against migrant smuggling should focus on the opening of new channels of legal entry and the reinforcement of existing ones for refugees and asylum seekers who make up a large share of smuggled migrants. An effective answer to human smuggling might require countries – especially receiving countries – to concentrate on reducing the “demand” of smuggling services more than curbing “supply.” Smugglers often constitute the only available option for those migrants when fleeing a situation of immediate danger and distress. Accordingly, a decisive step towards a more durable radical solution for this phenomenon demands the opening of new legal entry channels and the reinforcement of existing ones for refugees and asylum seekers, a large share of smuggled migrants.

Overview

Migrant Smuggling, Mafia, and Terrorism

There are plausible reasons to assume that mafia and other criminal organizations are increasingly taking control of the smuggling business to profit from such a billion-dollar business. However, this assumption is not supported by empirical data. Mafia, terrorist groups, and other large criminal organizations do not generally manage migrant smuggling. Their existing forms of interaction mostly consist of tolls extracted by these organizations from smugglers for transporting people through the areas under their control

Migrant Smuggling, Mafia, and Terrorism

Migrant Smuggling, Mafia, and Terrorism
ISAF photo by U.S. Air Force TSgt Laura K. Smith

It is often assumed that migrant smugglers run their business alongside a number of other illegal trades – most notably drug, human, and weapon trafficking. According to this claim, mafia and other criminal organizations are increasingly taking control of smuggling businesses. 

If human smuggling is a booming multibillionaire business, there is indeed plausible reason to believe that larger criminal groups could rely on the practice of smuggling for self-financing. This belief has often overestimated the extent and dimension of smuggling organizations. This seems to be supported by recent empirical<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">evidence</span><div class="popover">Source:<br><br><div>Achilli, L. and Tinti, A. Debunking the Smuggler-Terrorist Nexus: Human Smuggling and the Islamic State in the Middle East. Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, 2019.</div><br><br><div>—</div><div>Izcara Palacios, S. P. and Rubio, K. L. A. Terrorism and Human Smuggling in the US Southwestern Border. Psychology Research, 2018.</div><br><br><div>—</div><div>Sanchez, G. and Zhang, S. Rumors, Encounters, Collaborations, and Survival: The Migrant Smuggling–Drug Trafficking Nexus in the US Southwest. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 2018.</div></div></span>that shows how large criminal groups in Mexico and the Middle East have not consistently entered into the business of smuggling refugees as a means of financing. When interactions between these organizations and smuggling groups occur, they mostly involve the taxation of smugglers who move people across the areas under their de-facto jurisdiction. 

For example, disaggregated<span class="span"><span id=hint class="box-source">data</span><div class="popover">Source: <br><br><div>Center for the Analysis of Terrorism. ISIS Financing in 2015. Center for the Analysis of Terrorism. 2016.</div></div></span>retrieved by U.S. Special Forces from Islamic State (IS) financial records in Iraq and Syria show how this organization relies on rather diversified mechanisms of revenue generation, including the sale of natural resources (notably oil and natural gas). The records also outline a broad range of economic activities that involve a number of external, profit motivated intermediaries (such as truckers, traders, and cash couriers) who were taxed passage fees and custom duties to move goods across the areas under IS’s de-facto jurisdiction. Yet, smuggling of migrants is never mentioned in the budgetary documents.

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Learn more

Videos & Documentaries

1. What is Migrant Smuggling?. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, 2022.

2. Why do migrants risk their life to cross the English Channel?. BBC, 2021.

3. Profiting from misery – how smugglers bring people to Europe. Frontex, 2016.

4. Introducing Trafficking in Persons and Smuggling of Migrants. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, 2019.

5. What is behind migrant smuggling?. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, 2018.

6. Siegel, M. Human Trafficking vs. Smuggling. 2022.

7. Smuggled to America: Human Cargo. Sky News, 2018.

8. Borderless: Undercover with the People Smugglers. Al Jazeera, 2016.

9. Gastel, A., and Youssef, K. In A Libyan Prison, 'Love In Hell'. InfoMigrants, 2023.

10. The World's Most Dangerous Journey?. SBS Dateline, 2016.

11. Europe or Die. Vice News, 2015.

12. Migrant crisis: Secret film reveals people smugglers. BBC, 2015.

Stats, Databases & Infographics

1. Migrant Smuggling in the World: A Global Story. Migration Data Portal, 2017.

2. Global Organized Crime Index - Human smuggling. Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime.

Articles, Reports & Books

1. Achilli, L. The smuggler: hero or felon?. Migration Policy Centre, 2015.

2. Articles on People Smuggling. The Conversation.

3. Micallef, M. Trends in human trafficking and smuggling in post-revolution Libya: The Human Conveyor Belt. Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime, 2017.

4. Jordan, M. Smuggling Migrants at the Border Now a Billion-Dollar Business. The New York Times, 2022.

5. Nadeau, B. L. ‘Migrants are more profitable than drugs’: how the mafia infiltrated Italy’s asylum system. The Guardian, 2018.

6. Sanchez, G., and Achilli, L. Stranded: The impacts of COVID-19 on irregular migration and migrant smuggling. Migration Policy Centre, 2020.

7. Carrera, S. et al. Fit for purpose?: The Facilitation Directive and the criminalisation of humanitarian assistance to irregular migrants. European Parliament, 2018.

8. A study on smuggling of migrants: Characteristics, responses and cooperation with third countries. European Commission, 2015.

9. European Migrant Smuggling Centre 6th Annual Report. Europol, 2022.

10. Migrant smuggling: why we need a paradigm shift. Platform for Cooperation on Undocumented Migrants, 2022.

11. Smuggled South: An updated overview of mixed migration from the Horn of Africa to southern Africa with specific focus on protection risks, human smuggling and trafficking. Danish Refugee Council. 2017.

12. Sanchez, G., and Achilli, L. Critical Insights on Irregular Migration Facilitation: Global Perspectives. Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies, 2019.

13. Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, 2018.

14. Smuggling of Migrants by Air. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, 2010.

15. Smuggling of Migrants by Sea. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, 2011.

16. Migrant Smuggling in Asia: Current Trends and Related Challenges. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, 2018.

Eductional Resources

Teaching ideas and recommendations

Classroom Resources about Migrant Smuggling

1. Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants – PowerPoint Presentation. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, 2018.

2. Teacher's Guide Smuggling of Migrants - Video and Teacher's Guide. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, 2019.

3. Smuggling of Migrants: E-Learning Course. International Organization for Migration.

4. Teaching Module Series: Trafficking in Persons & Smuggling of Migrants. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

Classroom Resources about Migration

5. Teaching about Refugees - Fact sheets, Teaching sheets, Class debate sheets. United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

6. World Migration Interactive Educators’ Toolkit - Case studies and Interactive scenarios. International Organization for Migration.

7. Lesson Plans for “A Life Journey” – Migration and Demography. Population Europe.

8. Migration and Refugees Lesson Plans. Pulitzer Center Education, 2016.

9. Education resources on refugee and asylum issues. Amnesty International, 2023.

10. E-Learnings Courses about Migration. International Organization for Migration.

11. 8 educational resources to better understand the refugee crisis. Amnesty International, 2015.

12. Migration – Lesson plans and Activities. PRACTICE.

Classroom Resources about Migration in Slovak and Czech language

13. Aaronova dilema - Mobilná hra, ktorá vám priblíži osudy sýrskych utečencov. Gamifactory.

14. Útek do Peacestanu – Návrh zážitkovej vyučovacej hodiny. Človek v ohrození.

15. Ako učiť o migrácii na geografii – Návrhy vyučovacích hodín a aktivít. Zachraň Zeměpis.

16. Lidé v pohybu - metodická príručka na tému migrácie a utečencov. NaZemi a Junák - český skaut.

17. Aj my sme tu doma - súbor vzdelávacích materiálov o migrácii a integrácii migrantov. IOM Slovensko.

18. Stretnutím k porozumeniu - metodická príručka zážitkových aktivít. Mareena.

19. Príbehy utečencov, ktorí dostali na Slovensku šancu a majú tu nový domov. Human Rights League.

20. Dajme utečencom šancu: E-Learningový kurz. Human Rights League.

21. Metodické príručky a aktivity na tému migrácia. Globálne vzdelávanie.

22. Mluvme o migraci – výukové materiály na tému migrace. Jeden svět na školách.

23. Výukové lekce na tému migrace a lidský práva. Člověk v tísni.

24. Metodické materiály do výuky k tématu migrace, uprchlictví a integrace. Sdružení pro integraci a migraci.

25. Prečo máš predsudky? Metodický materiál k vzdelávaciemu videu. Mareena.

Other Educational Resources about Migrant Smuggling

26. Global Study on Smuggling of Migrants. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, 2018.

27. Migrant Smuggling. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. 

28. Migrant Smuggling. European Commission.

29. Human trafficking and migrant smuggling. Interpol.

30. Smuggling of Migrants. International Monetary Fund.

31. Smuggling of Migrants. Council of Europe.

32. What is the difference between trafficking in persons and smuggling of migrants?. Inter-Agency Coordination Group against Trafficking in Persons, 2016.

33. Smuggling of migrants. Migration Data Portal, 2021.

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