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The control of people smuggling and trafficking in the EU: experiences from the UK and Italy
In: Law and migration
Identifying Victims of Human Trafficking at Hotspots by Focusing on People Smuggled to Europe
Research has shown that smuggling of migrants is associated with human trafficking. Hence, victims of human trafficking amongst smuggled migrants should be identified by EU Member States at hotspots established by the European Commission, to overcome the migrant and refugee crisis. Identified victims should be given a visa and a programme of protection to escape their traffickers. In order to achieve these objectives, research suggests that EU law on migrant smuggling should be amended and the Temporary Protection Directive should be applied to smuggled persons when there is an indication that they may be victims of human trafficking. This approach should be adopted by the EASO in cooperation with police forces investigating smuggling and trafficking at hotspots.
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Identifying victims of human trafficking at hotspots by focusing on people smuggled to Europe
In: Social Inclusion, Band 5, Heft 2, S. 69-80
ISSN: 2183-2803
Research has shown that smuggling of migrants is associated with human trafficking. Hence, victims of human trafficking amongst smuggled migrants should be identified by EU Member States at hotspots established by the European Commission, to overcome the migrant and refugee crisis. Identified victims should be given a visa and a programme of protection to escape their traffickers. In order to achieve these objectives, research suggests that EU law on migrant smuggling should be amended and the Temporary Protection Directive should be applied to smuggled persons when there is an indication that they may be victims of human trafficking. This approach should be adopted by the EASO in cooperation with police forces investigating smuggling and trafficking at hotspots.
Police Cooperation in the European Union under the Treaty of Lisbon: Opportunities and Limitations, edited by H. Aden (Baden‐Baden: Nomos, 2015, ISBN 9783848708437); 266pp., €54.00 pb
In: Journal of common market studies: JCMS, Band 54, Heft 5, S. 1252-1253
ISSN: 1468-5965
Book Review: Trafficking in Human Beings, by Ana Isabel Pérez Cepeda and Demelsa Benito Sánchez. (Groningen: Europa Law Publishing, 2014)
In: Common Market Law Review, Band 53, Heft 1, S. 287-288
ISSN: 0165-0750
Recognising effective legal protection to people smuggled at sea, by reviewing the EU legal framework on human trafficking and solidarity between member states
In: Social Inclusion, Band 3, Heft 1, S. 76-87
ISSN: 2183-2803
The death toll of migrants at sea is on the increase. The EU and its Member States are not addressing the situation by widening the EU legal framework on human trafficking to persons smuggled at sea. People smuggled at sea are extremely vulnerable at the hands of their smugglers and suffer serious abuse of their human rights from their journeys through the desert, on the boats and when they reach their final destination. They become victims of human trafficking and they should not be neglected anymore by the EU and its Member States. However, all EU proposals lack of concreteness as Member States do not want to support and host migrants at sea on their territories. They are reluctant to launch solidarity between each other as requested by the Lisbon Treaty and by doing this, they are indirectly responsible for the death of many migrants at sea and for the abuse of their human rights. This article proposes alternatives to explore that could change the situation if Member States show their willingness to cooperate with each other.