'European Migration Law' explores the growth of EU migration law in both legislative and judicial developments. It analyses the general framework behind the EU rules of migration, the significance of human rights in policy making, and explores the legislation surrounding key issues including entry into EU territory, border controls, and asylum.
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Introduction : the judicial deconstruction of Union citizenship / Daniel Thym -- Extending citizenship rights and losing it all : brexit and the perils of "over-constitutionalisation" / Susanne K Schmidt -- The citizenship of personal circumstances in Europe / Dimitry Kochenov -- (De)Constructing the road to brexit : paving the way to further limitations on free movement and equal treatment? / Stephanie Reynolds -- Why did the citizenship jurisprudence change? / Urška Šadl and Suvi Sankari -- The evolution of citizens : rights in light of the European Union's constitutional development / Daniel Thym -- The engine of "europeanness" : free movement, social transnationalism and European identification / Ettore Recchi -- European citizenship and transnational rights : chronicles of a troubled narrative / Francesca Strumia -- Consolidating union citizenship : residence and solidarity rights for jobseekers and the economically inactive in the post-Dano era / Ferdinand Wollenschläger -- Back to the roots : no access to social assistance for Union citizens who are economically inactive / Paul Minderhoud and Sandra Mantu -- Integrating Union citizenship and the Charter of Fundamental Rights / Niamh Nic Shuibhne -- The constitutional status of foreigners and European Union citizens : loopholes and interactions in the scope of application of fundamental rights / Sara Iglesias Sánchez -- The integration exception : a new limit to social rights of third-country nationals in European Union law? / Karin De Vries -- Membership without naturalisation? : the limits of European Court of Human Rights case law on residence security and equal treatment / Clíodhna Murphy -- Conclusion : the non-simultaneous evolution of citizens' rights / Dora Kostakopoulou and Daniel Thym
Refugee law has recently become the focus of public debate. It various topics such as the failure to close the German border during the refugee crisis, cooperation with third countries such as Turkey or Libya, national housing standards, a reformed Dublin system and much more. Common to all these subject areas is that they are political Combine fundamental questions with legal details and one Demand an overall view of German, European and international legal rules. This complex mixed situation makes it difficult to determine the location asks about the structural problems of refugee law and thus the proverbial forest for the trees. - Im Zentrum öffentlicher Debatten stand das Flüchtlingsrecht zuletzt häufiger. Es gingum diverse Themen wie die unterlassene deutsche Grenzschließungwährend der Flüchtlingskrise, die Zusammenarbeit mit Drittländern wie der Türkei oder Libyen, innerstaatliche Unterbringungsstandards, ein reformiertes Dublin-System und vieles mehr. Gemeinsam ist all diesen Themenfeldern, dass sie politische Grundsatzfragen mit rechtstechnischen Einzelheiten verbinden und hierbei eine Gesamtschau deutscher, europäischer und internationaler Rechtsregeln einfordern. Diese komplexe Gemengelage erschwert eine Standortbestimmung, die nach den strukturellen Problemlagen des Flüchtlingsrechts fragt und damit den sprichwörtlichen Wald vor lauter Bäumen sichtbar macht.
Hauptbeschreibung: Das Migrationsrecht zielt auf eine rechtliche Steuerung des Zuzugs und der Integration von Ausländern. Mit Blick auf diese Zielsetzung entwickelt Daniel Thym systemleitende Ordnungsmuster für die eigenständige Aufgabenwahrnehmung durch die Migrationsverwaltung. Es geht um die handlungsorientierte Bezeichnung von Regelungsoptionen bei der rechtlichen Gestaltung der Wirtschaftsmigration, der gesellschaftlichen Integration, den Grenzen der Ausweisungsbefugnis und der Effektuierung des Kontrollregimes. Als Untersuchungsmaßstab dient die zeitgenössische Diskussion über die Grundlag
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In: Journal of modern European history: Zeitschrift für moderne europäische Geschichte = Revue d'histoire européenne contemporaine, Band 20, Heft 1, S. 24-28
Abstract Two controversial rulings of the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) deserve global attention, since they declined to scrutinize on human rights grounds the prevalent move towards enhanced border controls and externalization practices that define European asylum law and policy at this juncture. In ND and NT, judges deemed the Spanish policy of 'hot returns', without access to basic procedural guarantees, of those climbing border fences to be compatible with human rights. A few weeks later, the Grand Chamber thwarted enduring hopes for judicial innovation in MN when it reasserted a 'primarily territorial' understanding of State jurisdiction and declared inadmissible the claim of a Syrian family from the war-torn town of Aleppo to a humanitarian visa. While the decision on humanitarian visas means that 'non-arrival' policies cannot usually be challenged, critical inspection of the ND and NT judgment displays a confounding combination of restrictive arguments and dynamic elements beneath the surface of a seemingly clear-cut outcome. This lack of judicial precision, which was bound to cause heated debate about the practical implications of the judgment, reflects the basic tension between the prohibition of refoulement and the absence of a right to asylum in classic accounts of international refugee law. It will be argued that the judicial vindication of the Spanish 'hot returns' policy does not call into question non-refoulement obligations; it aims at identifying graded procedural standards for different categories of refugees and migrants. By contrast, the novel insistence on the abstract availability of legal channels of entry presents itself as a humanitarian fig leaf for the acceptance of strict control practices. At an intermediate level of abstraction, the two rulings mark a watershed moment, indicating the provisional endpoint of an impressive period of interpretative dynamism on the part of the ECtHR, which has played a critical role in the progressive evolution of international refugee and human rights law over the past three decades. Experts in asylum law who have become accustomed to supranational courts advancing the position of individuals will benefit from the insights of constitutional theory and the social sciences to rationalize why the former vigour has given way to a period of hesitation and potential standstill, at least in Europe. This analysis employs the perspective of strategic litigation to discuss contextual factors hindering the continued dynamism of human rights jurisprudence in Europe at this juncture.