• A long-term project tracking migrants and refugees as they settle in Europe

  • A long-term project tracking migrants and refugees as they settle in Europe

  • A long-term project tracking migrants and refugees as they settle in Europe

  • A long-term project tracking migrants and refugees as they settle in Europe

  • A long-term project tracking migrants and refugees as they settle in Europe

  • A long-term project tracking migrants and refugees as they settle in Europe

  • A long-term project tracking migrants and refugees as they settle in Europe

  • A long-term project tracking migrants and refugees as they settle in Europe

About

Like the people it covers, the migration story itself is on the move. In 2014 and 2015 it was all about the odyssey, the journey made by hundreds of thousands, haphazardly, perilously, up into Europe. In 2016, it was about Europe’s hesitant response, the political backlash.

In 2017, the focus is turning to the people who are suddenly in our midst. How are they adapting to their new lives? What do they miss? What’s it like to swap Homs for Hamburg, Kabul for Croydon - or Mosul for the Mosel, for that matter. Which European countries are best at helping refugees settle?

It is these questions that four major European newspapers are taking on in a new project entitled The New Arrivals. Over a period of 18 months, The Guardian, Le Monde, El País and Spiegel Online are embedding inside newly arrived communities in each of their countries to assess whether promises are being kept, whether European society is changing the new arrivals - and vice versa.