-
Who we are
WHO WE AREThe International Organization for Migration (IOM) is part of the United Nations System as the leading inter-governmental organization promoting since 1951 humane and orderly migration for the benefit of all, with 175 member states and a presence in 171 countries.
-
Our Work
Our WorkAs the leading inter-governmental organization promoting since 1951 humane and orderly migration, IOM plays a key role to support the achievement of the 2030 Agenda through different areas of intervention that connect both humanitarian assistance and sustainable development.
What We Do
What We Do
Partnerships
Partnerships
Highlights
Highlights
- Where we work
-
Take Action
Take Action
Work with us
Work with us
Get involved
Get involved
- Data and Research
- 2030 Agenda
IOM and CRAF'd Partner to Enhance Data-Driven Responses to Displacement
Geneva/Berlin, 23 April - The International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the Complex Risk Analytics Fund (CRAF'd) are proud to announce a new partnership to enhance the understanding of internal displacement and enable data-driven action to save lives and deliver solutions.
The partnership will deliver a first-of-its-kind global dataset offering comparable, sub-national mobility data drawing on DTM operations around the world.
“DTM is active in 100 countries, informing 86 per cent of humanitarian response plans worldwide,” said Koko Warner, Director of IOM’s Global Data Institute. “That is why the support from CRAF’d is pivotal in increasing efficiency system-wide by enabling the use of large amounts of data at an unprecedented spatial detail. That translates into stronger ability to save lives and drive solutions to displacement."
Humanitarian and mobility data historically have been stored in different formats across country-level databases, making it difficult to generate timely insight within and across crisis contexts. IOM and the CRAF’d will address this challenge through a new initiative called PRIMARI– the Progressive Representative of Internal Migration and Risk Intelligence – a system that consolidates and stores data in a central repository designed to enable actionable and comparable insight. By providing a unified and accessible data source, PRIMARI aims to empower decision-makers, policymakers and humanitarian actors to respond to crises in a more timely and comprehensive manner.
“CRAF'd are nurturing an essential dataset that illuminates human mobility and displacement in moments of crises. Together, we are enabling better support to people in need: earlier, faster, and in a more targeted and dignified way,” said Kersten Jauer, Deputy Director, Executive Office of the UN Secretary-General.
The critical role DTM has played within the Humanitarian Programme Cycle (HPC) over the last 15 years was formally acknowledged in the recently completed Independent Review of the IASC Response to Internal Displacement published by ODI in March 2024. This project will focus on strengthening DTM’s role as a data provider for the humanitarian system to support closer collaboration within the humanitarian sector to act and save lives.
Through PRIMARI, 42 million people in fragile and crisis-affected settings will benefit from faster, more targeted, and more dignified assistance.
***
For more information, please contact:
Jorge Galindo, IOM GDI, Tel: +4915226216775, Email: jgalindo@iom.int
Or visit: https://crafd.io/data-financing/iom
Note to editors
About DTM:
IOM’s Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM) gathers and analyzes data to disseminate critical multi layered information on the mobility, vulnerabilities, and needs of displaced and mobile populations that enables decision makers and responders to provide these populations with better context-specific assistance. To learn more visit: https://dtm.iom.int/
About CRAF’d:
The UN-hosted Complex Risk Analytics Fund (CRAF’d) is the first and only multi-partner instrument to finance, connect, and reimagine data to save lives. The CRAF’d ecosystem already spans over 100 partners and 40,000 users globally, leveraging CRAF’d-supported data and insights to shape over $10 billion in crisis assistance every year. Key financial contributors to CRAF’d include the United States of America, the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands, and the European Commission.