International Organization for Migration
| Formation | 6 December 1951 |
|---|---|
| Type | UN Related Organization |
| Headquarters | Geneva, Switzerland |
| Membership | 175 member states and 8 observer states (2024) |
Official languages | English, French and Spanish |
Director General | Amy E. Pope |
| Budget | US$2.5 billion (2021) |
| Staff | 17,761 (2021) |
| Website | www |
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The International Organization for Migration (IOM) is a United Nations related organization working in the field of migration. The organization implements operational assistance programmes for migrants, including internally displaced persons, refugees, and migrant workers. Recent scholarship has emphasized that ICEM's early operations also intersected with, and disrupted, existing commercial migration networks. Prior to the 1950s, migration from Europe had largely been facilitated by private travel agencies and transport intermediaries that provided documentation assistance, medical arrangements, and passage booking. Historians have argued that ICEM's subsidised transport programmes and direct processing of migrants challenged these private actors, producing tensions over authority, pricing, and control within what has been described as a post-war migration industry. Over time, this competition gave way to more hybrid arrangements, as ICEM relied on commercial carriers and agencies adapted to new institutional frameworks.
The International Organization for Migration is a UN agency based in Geneva. Its director general is Amy E. Pope.