E.g., 04/28/2024
E.g., 04/28/2024
The Mobility Key: Realizing the Potential of Refugee Travel Documents
Policy Briefs
February 2024

The Mobility Key: Realizing the Potential of Refugee Travel Documents

Governments are increasingly experimenting with new mobility pathways for refugees, beyond traditional resettlement operations. These include complementary pathways that connect refugees with work or study opportunities in a country other than the one in which they first sought safety—expanding their future prospects while easing pressure on top refugee-hosting countries.

Refugees’ ability to take up these and other opportunities abroad depends to a significant extent on their access to the travel documents required to reach their destination. Yet refugees are generally unable to safely use the most common travel document: a passport issued by a person’s country of origin.

This policy brief—part of the Beyond Territorial Asylum: Making Protection Work in a Bordered World initiative led by MPI and the Robert Bosch Stiftung—outlines the different types of travel documents that can facilitate refugees’ movement and key barriers to acquiring and using them. It also identifies steps that countries of asylum, transit, and destination, along with donors and international organizations, can take to overcome these challenges.

Table of Contents 

1  Introduction

2  What Role Do Travel Documents Play in International Mobility?

3  How Alternative Documents Facilitate Refugees’ Travel
A. Documents Issued by Countries of Asylum
B. Documents Issued by Destination States
C. The ICRC Emergency Travel Document
D. Drawbacks to Single-Use Documents

4  Barriers to Acquiring and Using Travel Documents
A. Barriers in Countries of Asylum
B. Barriers in Transit and Destination Countries

5  Removing Barriers and Constraints
A. Countries of Asylum
B. Destination and Transit Countries
C. Donor Countries and International Agencies

6  Moving Forward