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The External Dimension of Italian Migration Policy (DEPMI): a mapping of the tools to manage migratory flows with countries of origin and transit

Thursday 26 February 2026

Italy's migration policy is expanding fast - but remains understudied.

Our Visiting Fellow Dr Matilde Rosina has co-authored a new article in Italian Political Science with Dr Iole Fontana and Dr Sahizer Samuk, which highlights how the External Dimension of Italian Migration Policy (DEPMI) addresses this gap, and the lessons that can be drawn from its data.

The DEPMI project maps Italy’s engagement with 28 countries (2000–2024), creating a dataset of 140+ bilateral instruments and 1,800 development cooperation projects, as well as 28 country profiles and an interactive map.

The authors find that Sub-Saharan Africa has moved to the centre of Italy’s migration diplomacy - driven by containment, returns, and the strategic use of legal pathways.

Matilde Rosina

Abstract

"Recent shifts in migration governance – especially the externalisation of border control and the strategic use of migration cooperation – demand systematic analyses of how states manage migration beyond their borders. Italy has emerged as a key actor in this domain, yet its external migration policies remain understudied. The DEPMI project addresses this gap by mapping and analysing Italy’s bilateral migration engagement with 28 countries across North Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, the Balkans, the Middle East, and Asia between 2000 and 2024. It sheds light on the objectives, tools, and evolution of Italy’s external migration governance through two original datasets of over 140 bilateral instruments and 1,800 migration-related development cooperation projects. Complemented by 28 country profiles and an interactive map, DEPMI provides a robust framework for comparative analysis and policy reflection. This article outlines the project’s aims and methodology, while presenting key research findings from the Sub-Saharan African context. It shows how the region, once peripheral, has become central to Italy’s migration diplomacy, with a strong emphasis on containment, returns, and the strategic use of legal migration as diplomatic leverage."


Read the full journal article