222 Int. J. Migration and Border Studies, Vol. 4, No. 3, 2018
Copyright © 2018 Inderscience Enterprises Ltd.
The human rights of smuggled migrants and
trafficked persons in the UN global compacts on
migrants and refugees
Jean-Pierre Gauci*
British Institute of International and Comparative Law,
Charles Clore House, 17 Russell Square,
WC1B 5JP, London, UK
Email: J.gauci@biicl.org
and
The People for Change Foundation,
173, St. Julian’s Str. San Gwann, SGN 2803, Malta
*Corresponding author
Vladislava Stoyanova
Faculty of Law,
Lund University, Sweden
Email: vladislava.stoyanova@jur.lu.se
Abstract: On 19 September 2016, the UNGA adopted the New York
Declaration for Refugees and Migrants through which States committed to
developing two compacts: one on refugees and one on safe, orderly and regular
migration. The Zero Drafts of the compacts were published on 31 January 2018
and 5 February 2018, respectively. The move towards the discussion
and adoption of the global compacts comes in part in recognition of the
unprecedented number of displaced persons (and human mobility more
generally) around the globe and cynically in response to the number of would
be asylum seekers that arrived on Europe’s shores over the past three years.
This paper seeks to engage with what the global compacts should seek to
achieve in relation to smuggling and trafficking and whether there is room for
cautious optimism in what might be achieved by the compacts in relation to the
protection of smuggled migrants and trafficked persons. In so doing, it focuses
on the potential of the compacts within the existing framework of the UN
protocols against human smuggling and human trafficking.
Keywords: human trafficking; human smuggling; New York Declaration for
Refugees and Migrants; UN Global Compacts.
Reference to this paper should be made as follows: Gauci, J-P. and
Stoyanova, V. (2018) ‘The human rights of smuggled migrants and trafficked
persons in the UN global compacts on migrants and refugees’, Int. J. Migration
and Border Studies, Vol. 4, No. 3, pp.222–235.
Biographical notes: Jean-Pierre Gauci is an Associate Senior Research Fellow
in Public International Law at BIICL and Director of The People for Change
Foundation. He holds a PhD in Law from King’s College London and a Doctor