Migration Pulse Hub advances refugee and migrant rights through research, legal action, advocacy, storytelling, and community-led policy engagement across Eastern Africa.
Our mission: to ensure that the rights of every migrant and displaced person are recognised, respected, and upheld — regardless of borders.
Who We Are
Grounded in Rights, Driven by Evidence
Everything we do is anchored in international human rights law, community voices, and rigorous evidence. We do not just document injustice — we dismantle it.
Regional Focus
We work across East Africa — where displacement, labour migration, and climate-driven movement intersect at scale. Our programmes operate in Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia, Somalia, South Sudan, and the DRC.
Rights-Based Approach
We ground every intervention in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the 1951 Refugee Convention, the Kampala Convention, and the AU Migration Policy Framework for Africa.
Evidence-Led Action
Our research team generates primary data and collaborates with academic institutions to produce credible, actionable evidence. Evidence that moves policy — not just paper.
Our Work
Five Pillars of Action
Our work is organised around five mutually reinforcing pillars that address the full cycle of migration governance — from community protection and legal aid to continental policy and sustainable livelihoods.
Pillar 01
Advocacy & Policy Engagement
We engage governments, regional bodies, and international institutions to shape migration policy. Our team participates in AU, IGAD, and EAC processes to embed migrant rights into frameworks that matter.
We conduct field research, surveys, and case studies across East Africa to produce data that decision-makers need. Our Knowledge Hub makes every publication freely accessible.
Our legal team provides direct legal assistance — case representation, documentation support, referrals, and strategic litigation where migrant and refugee rights are systematically violated.
We train civil society organisations, community leaders, frontline workers, and local authorities on migration rights, trauma-informed care, and protection protocols.
We support displaced communities with economic integration programmes, livelihood skills, and grassroots networks that rebuild dignity and self-reliance beyond displacement.
Organisation-verified data from our programmes since 2020. As a young organisation, every number below represents a real person, case, or published work — not an estimate.
These are not Migration Pulse Hub statistics. They represent the broader crisis our work responds to — sourced from UNHCR's verified global data.
122.6MForcibly Displaced WorldwideUNHCR Global Trends, 2024
43.4MRefugees GloballyUNHCR Mid-Year Report, 2024
853KRefugees & Asylum-Seekers in KenyaUNHCR Kenya Fact Sheet, May 2025
Migration Pulse Hub gave us a language to speak about our rights. Before their training, we did not know that what was happening to us had a name — and that the law was on our side.
Maria O. — Community Representative, South Sudanese Diaspora Network, Nairobi
Name changed to protect privacy. Shared with participant's consent.
Policy Watch
Refugee Law & Policy Updates
Tracking legislative, judicial, and protection developments across Kenya and East Africa that directly affect migrants, refugees, and IDPs.
Kenya
1 February 2024
Kenya Refugees (General) Regulations 2024 Gazetted
The new Regulations, gazetted 29 December 2023 and commenced 1 February 2024, provide a revised legal framework for refugee status determination, encampment policy, and rights to documentation. Our analysis outlines the key implications for protection actors.
UNHCR
April 2025
Kenya Biometric Registration Drive — 853K Persons of Concern
UNHCR Kenya's May 2025 Fact Sheet confirmed 853,074 registered refugees and asylum-seekers, with a biometric re-registration drive underway at Kakuma, Dadaab, and urban centres. MPH is supporting community outreach and documentation assistance.
East Africa
March 2025
IGAD Updates Regional Migration Policy Framework
The Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) has updated its Regional Migration Policy Framework to include stronger climate-linked displacement provisions. MPH participated in technical consultations and submitted written recommendations on protection gaps.
The new Regulations bring revised encampment policy, expanded documentation rights, and a clearer status determination process. Our team breaks down what it means on the ground.
Our latest research documents climate-linked displacement across Ethiopia, Somalia, and Kenya — with policy recommendations for governments, IGAD, and humanitarian donors.
Our capacity building programme completed its second cohort, equipping 350+ community paralegals with legal literacy, rights documentation, and trauma-informed support skills.
Join us for forums, workshops, and webinars on migration rights, refugee protection, and policy advocacy across East Africa.
JUN172026
★ Featured
Annual Event · Jun 17–20
KICC, Nairobi · In-person & Virtual
Refugee Week Kenya 2026
A 4-day landmark gathering on the theme "Integration and Courage — Shaping a Shared Future", bringing together refugee communities, policymakers, artists, and advocates across Eastern Africa. Culminates on World Refugee Day, 20 June.
A two-day convening of civil society, government, and regional bodies to address protection gaps, climate-linked displacement, and the implementation of the Kenya Refugees Regulations 2024.
A 5-day intensive training for frontline community workers on refugee rights, legal documentation, and trauma-informed communication. Hosted jointly with Refugee Law Project Uganda.
Kenya Refugee Law Update Seminar: Regulations 2024 Explained
An online seminar with legal practitioners, civil society organisations, and UNHCR representatives to unpack the Kenya Refugees (General) Regulations 2024 and their practical implications.
Whether you are a donor, partner, volunteer, researcher, or advocate — there is a place for you in this movement. Every contribution strengthens the protection of human dignity.