Cross-border economic zones, CBEZ, special economic zones, SEZ, Mozambique migration, South Africa migration, labour migration, migrant health, migration health, circular migration, Maputo Corridor, Nkomazi SEZ, cross-border employment, migrant workers, seasonal workers, occupational health, TB among migrants, HIV among migrants, migration policy, regional economic integration, southern Mozambique, Mpumalanga, Limpopo, Gauteng, migrant women, gendered migration, undocumented migrants, health infrastructure, migrant housing, labour protections, remittances, migration pressures, economic development, SADC trade, AfCFTA, border employment zones, health-service integration, migrant community engagement, public health interventions, migration research, bilateral governance, migration reduction strategies, cross-border trade, Mozambican diaspora, migrant continuity of care, migrant vulnerability, occupational disease, agro-processing zones, pilot economic zones, border-region employment

What Cross-Border Economic Zones Could Reduce Migration Pressures Between Mozambique and South Africa?

Reducing Migration via Cross-Border Economic Zones Opening: the migration–economy–health nexus Each year, thousands of Mozambicans travel to South Africa seeking better livelihoods. Recent estimates suggest more than 800,000 Mozambican migrants live in South Africa, concentrated in Gauteng, KwaZulu‑Natal, Mpumalanga, and Limpopo (scielo.org.za). Limited formal employment in southern Mozambique drives this migration, while South Africa’s mining, […]

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