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Oct 23, 2025

Czech EMN conference sets blueprint for next-generation migrant integration policy

Czech EMN conference sets blueprint for next-generation migrant integration policy
Held in Prague on 23 October, the European Migration Network (EMN) Czech National Conference brought together over 150 officials, academics and NGO representatives to debate a new long-term vision for immigrant integration. Hosted by the Ministry of the Interior’s Department of Asylum and Migration Policy at the Grandium Hotel, the event marks the start of consultations on an updated ‘Concept for the Integration of Foreigners’, the first overhaul of Czechia’s integration strategy since 2016.

Key themes included bolstering Czech-language training, streamlining access to regional labour offices and introducing a digital ‘Integration Passport’ to track each migrant’s progress across language, employment and civic-engagement milestones. Municipalities such as Brno and Plzeň showcased pilot projects using EU cohesion funds to co-finance affordable housing tied to vocational up-skilling.

Business-immigration practitioners welcomed signals that the forthcoming strategy will shorten processing times for Employment and Blue Cards by delegating more decision-making to accredited employers. The Interior Ministry confirmed that a draft law incorporating these measures will be submitted to parliament in Q2 2026.

For multinational HR teams the conference underscored Czechia’s shift from a purely security-driven immigration stance to a talent-attraction agenda – critical as the country’s labour force is projected to shrink by 250,000 workers this decade. Companies should engage in the public-consultation phase to shape practical onboarding tools and ensure that skilled-worker pathways align with real-world recruitment needs.
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