Selected developments in human rights and democracy in 2018 : migration and asylum in Europe / Lorenzo Durante Viola, Cristina Pugnale, Federica Russo, Tamara Siwczyk, Paloma Torres Lopez
2019
Formats
| Format | |
|---|---|
| BibTeX | |
| MARCXML | |
| TextMARC | |
| MARC | |
| DublinCore | |
| EndNote | |
| NLM | |
| RefWorks | |
| RIS | |
Title
Selected developments in human rights and democracy in 2018 : migration and asylum in Europe / Lorenzo Durante Viola, Cristina Pugnale, Federica Russo, Tamara Siwczyk, Paloma Torres Lopez
Imprint
Venice, Italy: Global Campus of Human Rights, 2019
Language Note
English
Summary
2018 marks a milestone year with respect to the socio-legal and
political aspects surrounding the issue of migration due to the adoption of the
two Global Compacts (the Global Compact on Refugees and the Global
Compact on Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration). In the first part this article
gives an insight into the content of the Global Compact on Migration (GCM),
which led to a loss of unity of European Union representation. The article
further analyses two highly controversial topics from the Global Compact,
namely, the so-called ‘climate migrants’ and ‘migrants in vulnerable situations’.
Notwithstanding its soft law nature, the examination of the GCM reveals that
both groups received recognition at a global level for the first time. Furthermore,
the article analyses how these divergent positions on migration are being
reflected in the EU’s policy making. The article finds that, instead of lifting the
unequal migratory burden from some member states through harmonisation,
EU policies have had the main aim to prevent migrants from entering into EU
jurisdiction. Crucial developments in this context are the criminalisation of
search and rescue NGOs, the transfer of search and rescue responsibilities to
third countries and the outsourcing of migration-related responsibilities.
Overall, the lack of progress in reforming the common European asylum system
resulted in the externalisation of the EU migration policies through bilateral
and multilateral agreements with transit countries. Finally, although the issue
of migration requires political responses, the protection of refugees and
migrants has increasingly relied upon judicial institutions.
Key words: Global Compact on Migration; climate migrants; migrants in
vulnerable situations; search and rescue; externalisation policies; common
European asylum system
Linked Resources
Record Appears in
Language
English