How is the Swedish Migration Agency monitoring the world around us?
The way the Swedish Migration Agency operates is largely determined by events beyond Sweden’s borders. The Swedish Migration Agency needs information to be able to assess future developments in migration and for taking decisions that are legally secure.
How many people will apply for a work permit – or protection – in Sweden next year? How dangerous is the situation in Afghanistan following the Taliban’s takeover? And what will happen in Ukraine? The Swedish Migration Agency must be able to provide thorough answers to these kinds of questions.
This is why the Agency has a unit that assesses various aspects of migration with the help of two analyst groups – country of origin information analysts and migration intelligence analysts.
Country of origin information analysts – crucial for asylum examinations
The country of origin information analysts study a wide range of information from sources such as organisations, authorities and legislation. They use this information to describe the conditions in a particular country. The information needs of the Swedish Migration Agency’s determine which countries or regions form the basis of a country report, which is then published in the external database, Lifos External link..

The country reports are used by those processing and taking decisions in individual cases. They also form an important component of the assessment basis when lawyers at the Swedish Migration Agency establish legal opinions, part of the country-based legal guidance necessary to process cases efficiently, uniformly and in a legally secure manner.
However, the Agency takes individual decisions on asylum cases. These decisions are based on the circumstances of a specific case that determine whether a person will receive protection in Sweden or not.
A country report may be about Somalia and address the current situation in the country in terms of safety, human rights and humanitarian conditions. What have other countries and organisations established about the situation? Are there any people, such as women, LGBTQI people, ethnic groups
or religious communities who are particularly vulnerable? Which regions are more or less safe? These are some of the questions that a country report can answer when a person from Somalia is seeking protection in Sweden.
Migration intelligence analysts create strategic and operational data
The migration intelligence analysts have a different perspective. They are tasked with creating a basis to assess short and long-term developments in migration to Sweden. They analyse developments in the world around us and provide data to the Agency in the form of situational analyses, reports and assessments. This data is used in the Swedish Migration Agency’s prognoses (in Swedish), as well as the strategic and operational work that keeps the Agency running efficiently.

The migration intelligence analysts investigate what forces people from different countries of origin. They often collaborate with country of origin information analysts. Migration intelligence analysts also examine the accessibility of migration routes, Sweden’s attractiveness as a destination country and the situation in other major European destination countries. Political decisions on migration – both in Sweden and abroad – can have
a major impact on the number of people seeking protection in the country. Sweden’s proportion of the total number of asylum seekers in Europe has decreased over time, and the migration intelligence analysts have a particular focus on the political dimension at both national and EU level.
Together with other experts at the Agency, they analyse the situation in other non-asylum categories to determine how these will develop over time. Work permits are one example of where developments are analysed based on legislation, economic situation and external factors.

The map is an example of a typical Frontex document. It illustrates how irregular migration to the EU changed between 2022 and 2023. The term ‘irregular migration’ is used to describe people from a non-EU country who cross borders without meeting the legal requirements to enter the Union. The image shows the primary routes – the routes taken from irregular migrants to enter the EU from non-EU countries. It shows, for example, that migration via the Eastern Mediterranean increased by 55 per cent in 2023 compared to 2022, and that 60 073 people crossed the border into the EU.
Routes illustrated from left to right:
Western Africa
Western Mediterranean
Exits towards the UK
Central Mediterranean
Western Balkan
Eastern Land Border
Eastern Mediterranean

What financial support is given to people seeking protection in Sweden?
People seeking protection in Sweden are entitled to different types of allowances and subsidies from the Swedish Migration Agency, for example, an allowance to cover their everyday expenses or to buy a pram.
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In what ways can you move to Sweden to be with your family?
In the first half of 2024, close family ties to someone in Sweden was the second largest basis for granting a resident permit in Sweden.
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What happens between the time of application and decision?
Why is the waiting time sometimes very long before receiving a decision and why does it differ between two similar applications?