Humanitarian Admission to Europe: The Law between Promises and Constraints
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Baden-Baden
Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft
2020
|
Ausgabe: | 1st ed |
Schriftenreihe: | Schriften zum Migrationsrecht
v.30 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | DE-2070s |
Beschreibung: | Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (371 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9783845298603 |
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505 | 8 | |a Cover -- Introduction: Humanitarian Admission to Europe. From Policy Developments to Legal Controversies and Litigation -- Introduction -- 1 Policy Developments Towards Humanitarian Admission to Europe -- 1.1 From 'Legal Avenues' and 'Safe Pathways', to 'Humanitarian Visas' and other 'Protected Entry Procedures' -- 1.2 Policy Developments at EU Level. A Focus on Resettlement -- 2 Litigation for Humanitarian Admission to Europe -- 3 A Cautious and Reserved Judicial Intervention -- 3.1 The CJEU Invoking the Limits to its Competence of Judicial Review -- 3.2. Some Limits to the Intervention of Courts in Policy Debates on Humanitarian admission to Europe -- 4 The Revolving Doors of the Rule of Law -- 5 The Law Between Promises and Constraints -- Part 1. Humanitarian Admission Under International and EU Law. The Right to Asylum and its Paradoxes -- Chapter 1: Humanitarian Admission Under Universal Human Rights Law: Some Observations Regarding the International Covenants -- Introduction -- 1 A Major Discrepancy Between Moral Claim and Legal Reality -- 2 Observations -- 2.1 The Scope of Human Rights - Territory, Jurisdiction and Beyond? -- 2.2 Extraterritorial Jurisdiction According to the ICCPR and the ICESCR -- 2.2.1 The Standard of the ICCPR -- 2.2.2 The Standard of the ICESCR -- 2.3 The Exercise of Jurisdiction and Resulting Human Rights Obligations in Embassies -- 2.4 Inside Jurisdiction and/or Territory, but Outside Full Human Rights Protection -- Conclusion and Outlook -- Chapter 2: Humanitarian Admission and the Charter of Fundamental Rights -- Introduction -- Between a Rock and a Hard Place: The Plight of the Syrian Family and the Externalisation of Border Control by the EU -- The Common European Asylum System (CEAS) -- Schengen and the EU Legal Framework on Visas -- Protected Entry Procedures and Humanitarian Visas | |
505 | 8 | |a The Problem of the 'Foot in the Door' to the EU -- The Situation of the Syrian Family -- The ECJ's Interpretation of EU Law -- The Application of the EU Fundamental Rights Framework to Humanitarian Visas -- The Political Questions: Policy and Legislative Discussions at the EU Level -- Conclusion -- Chapter 3: Is Access to Asylum the Same as Access to Justice? -- Introduction -- 1. The Setting of the Play: The Right of Asylum, a Right 'of the Foot in the Door' -- 2. The Need for Legal Avenues -- 3. X & -- X: Does EU LAW require EU States to Open Legal Avenues for Asylum Seekers? -- 4. A Right Understanding of the Visa Code? -- 4.1 The text -- 4.2 The Inconstancy of the Criteria of Intention -- 4.3 The Forgotten Possibility for a Prolongation -- 5. Scope of Application of EU Asylum Law -- 6. Consequences on the Application of the EU Charter -- 7. The scope of territorial jurisdiction of the European Convention of Human Rights -- 8. Access to Justice and the Criteria of the Availability of an Alternative -- 9. Bridging the Gaps in Access to Justice: the Global Compact for Refugees -- Part 2. Humanitarian Admission Under Domestic Law. Between Formalised Procedures and Informal Practices -- Chapter 4: Humanitarian Admission to Italy through Humanitarian Visas and Corridors -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Humanitarian corridors for beneficiaries of protection -- 2.1 Legal basis of the humanitarian corridors -- 2.2 The MoUs for the humanitarian corridors: signatories, selection of countries and number of humanitarian visas -- 2.3 The process of identification and selection of beneficiaries for the humanitarian corridors -- 2.4 Criteria to identify the beneficiaries -- 2.4.1 'Vulnerability' -- 2.4.2 Integration in Italy and avoidance of secondary movements -- 2.5 Reception of beneficiaries: legal status and support provided after arrival | |
505 | 8 | |a 2.6 Perspectives for enhancement and replication of the humanitarian corridors in other countries -- 2.7 Shortcomings -- 3 Other uses of humanitarian visas and instances of ad-hoc entry measures -- 4 Value of a common EU framework on protection entries -- 4.1. The debate on the need of EU legislation on protected entries -- 4.2. Recommendations for the adoption of common legislation on humanitarian visas -- 4.2.1 Subjective right -- 4.2.2 Procedural guarantees -- 5 Conclusion -- Appendix -- Chapter 5: Humanitarian Admission to Germany - Access vs. Rights ? -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Admission in exceptional individual cases -- 6.3 Quota-based admission at federal level: Ad hoc schemes for individuals fleeing Syria -- 6.3.1 HAP Syria 1 - 3: Procedure and beneficiaries -- 6.3.2 Admissions on the basis of the EU-Turkey-Statement: HAP Turkey -- 6.4 Humanitarian admission schemes at Länder level -- 6.4.1 Private sponsorship programmes for relatives of Syrian nationals in Germany -- 6.4.2 Controversies raised by private sponsorship: Duration of financial commitments -- 6.5 The German resettlement programme -- 6.5.1 Beneficiaries of resettlement -- 6.5.2 Resettlement procedures -- 6.5.3 Germany's commitment to the EU resettlement programme: A game of numbers -- 6.6 Combining resettlement with community sponsorship: The NesT-Programme -- 6.6.1 The mentorship scheme as novelty to resettlement -- 6.6.2 NesT - Weak resettlement or improved private-sponsorship? -- 6.7 Access vs. rights? -- 6.7.1 The quality of protection and the method of arrival -- 6.7.1.1 Reception and place of residence -- 6.7.1.2 Duration of stay and options of permanent settlement -- 6.7.1.3 Access to work, social benefits and language courses -- 6.7.1.4 The travel document as 'Achilles heel' of resettlement refugee status | |
505 | 8 | |a 6.7.2 The changing laws and policies regarding family reunification -- 6.7.2.1 Family reunification depends on the method of arrival -- 6.7.2.2 Family reunification depends on the time of arrival: The changing laws and policies regarding beneficiaries of subsidiary protection -- 6.8 Conclusion -- Chapter 6: Humanitarian Admission to Belgium -- Introduction -- 1 The Legislation -- 2 The Administrative Practices and Case Law -- Conclusion: The Pending Questions -- Part 3. Claiming Humanitarian Admission. Survival Strategies and Litigation Attempts -- Chapter 7: Unpacking Vulnerability: An Ethnographic Account of the Challenges of Implementing Resettlement Programmes in a Refugee Camp in Uganda -- Introduction -- 1 A Word on Method -- 2 Problematising Vulnerability -- 2.1 Conforming to Vulnerability Categories -- 2.2 Multiplying Soft Law Regimes -- 3 Unpacking UNHCR's Categories of Vulnerability -- 3.1 Dependency on aid system -- 3.2 Climate Change -- 3.3 Economic Dimension -- 3.4 Poor Infrastructure -- 3.5 Contested Concept of 'Family' -- 3.6 Conflict of Interest in the Provision of Aid Services -- 3.7 The Exercise of Discretion by Aid Agencies -- 4 Escaping Vulnerability: Survival Strategies -- Conclusion -- Chapter 8: Making the Case X& -- X for the Humanitarian Visa -- Part 4. Some Future Prospects on Humanitarian Admission to Europe -- Chapter 9: The Objective of Resettlement in an EU Constitutional Perspective -- Introduction -- 1. The emerging EU resettlement law -- 1.1. Emphasis on resettlement in the context of crisis -- 1.2. Elements of the emerging EU resettlement law -- 2. The controversies on the objective of resettlement -- 2.1. Towards replacing territorial asylum procedures? -- 2.2. Towards externalising responsibility? -- 3. The constitutional objective of resettlement | |
505 | 8 | |a 3.1. Resettlement as a component of the Common European Asylum System -- 3.2. Objective I: Providing international protection -- 3.3. Objective II: Complementing territorial asylum procedures -- 3.4. Objective III: Sharing international responsibility -- Conclusion -- Chapter 10: EU Initiatives on a European Humanitarian Visa -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The concept of humanitarian visas within the EU Legal framework -- 2.1 What do we mean by humanitarian visa? -- 2.2. Humanitarian visas and EU fundamental rights -- 3. Current Regulatory Framework -- 4. For a comprehensive approach to humanitarian visas: EU Parliament vs. European Commission and Council -- 4.1 From the Treaty of Amsterdam to the Stockholm Programme -- 4.2. From the Stockholm Programme to the migration crisis -- 4.3 The LIBE Committee's legislative own-initiative report -- 5. Some concluding observations -- Conclusion: The Role of the Judge in Controlling the Genuine Enjoyment of the Substance of the Rights -- The Long-term Path: Visa Facilitation and Suppression -- The Short-term Path: Judicial Control | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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author | Foblets, Marie-Claire |
author_facet | Foblets, Marie-Claire |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Foblets, Marie-Claire |
author_variant | m c f mcf |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV048220679 |
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contents | Cover -- Introduction: Humanitarian Admission to Europe. From Policy Developments to Legal Controversies and Litigation -- Introduction -- 1 Policy Developments Towards Humanitarian Admission to Europe -- 1.1 From 'Legal Avenues' and 'Safe Pathways', to 'Humanitarian Visas' and other 'Protected Entry Procedures' -- 1.2 Policy Developments at EU Level. A Focus on Resettlement -- 2 Litigation for Humanitarian Admission to Europe -- 3 A Cautious and Reserved Judicial Intervention -- 3.1 The CJEU Invoking the Limits to its Competence of Judicial Review -- 3.2. Some Limits to the Intervention of Courts in Policy Debates on Humanitarian admission to Europe -- 4 The Revolving Doors of the Rule of Law -- 5 The Law Between Promises and Constraints -- Part 1. Humanitarian Admission Under International and EU Law. The Right to Asylum and its Paradoxes -- Chapter 1: Humanitarian Admission Under Universal Human Rights Law: Some Observations Regarding the International Covenants -- Introduction -- 1 A Major Discrepancy Between Moral Claim and Legal Reality -- 2 Observations -- 2.1 The Scope of Human Rights - Territory, Jurisdiction and Beyond? -- 2.2 Extraterritorial Jurisdiction According to the ICCPR and the ICESCR -- 2.2.1 The Standard of the ICCPR -- 2.2.2 The Standard of the ICESCR -- 2.3 The Exercise of Jurisdiction and Resulting Human Rights Obligations in Embassies -- 2.4 Inside Jurisdiction and/or Territory, but Outside Full Human Rights Protection -- Conclusion and Outlook -- Chapter 2: Humanitarian Admission and the Charter of Fundamental Rights -- Introduction -- Between a Rock and a Hard Place: The Plight of the Syrian Family and the Externalisation of Border Control by the EU -- The Common European Asylum System (CEAS) -- Schengen and the EU Legal Framework on Visas -- Protected Entry Procedures and Humanitarian Visas The Problem of the 'Foot in the Door' to the EU -- The Situation of the Syrian Family -- The ECJ's Interpretation of EU Law -- The Application of the EU Fundamental Rights Framework to Humanitarian Visas -- The Political Questions: Policy and Legislative Discussions at the EU Level -- Conclusion -- Chapter 3: Is Access to Asylum the Same as Access to Justice? -- Introduction -- 1. The Setting of the Play: The Right of Asylum, a Right 'of the Foot in the Door' -- 2. The Need for Legal Avenues -- 3. X & -- X: Does EU LAW require EU States to Open Legal Avenues for Asylum Seekers? -- 4. A Right Understanding of the Visa Code? -- 4.1 The text -- 4.2 The Inconstancy of the Criteria of Intention -- 4.3 The Forgotten Possibility for a Prolongation -- 5. Scope of Application of EU Asylum Law -- 6. Consequences on the Application of the EU Charter -- 7. The scope of territorial jurisdiction of the European Convention of Human Rights -- 8. Access to Justice and the Criteria of the Availability of an Alternative -- 9. Bridging the Gaps in Access to Justice: the Global Compact for Refugees -- Part 2. Humanitarian Admission Under Domestic Law. Between Formalised Procedures and Informal Practices -- Chapter 4: Humanitarian Admission to Italy through Humanitarian Visas and Corridors -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Humanitarian corridors for beneficiaries of protection -- 2.1 Legal basis of the humanitarian corridors -- 2.2 The MoUs for the humanitarian corridors: signatories, selection of countries and number of humanitarian visas -- 2.3 The process of identification and selection of beneficiaries for the humanitarian corridors -- 2.4 Criteria to identify the beneficiaries -- 2.4.1 'Vulnerability' -- 2.4.2 Integration in Italy and avoidance of secondary movements -- 2.5 Reception of beneficiaries: legal status and support provided after arrival 2.6 Perspectives for enhancement and replication of the humanitarian corridors in other countries -- 2.7 Shortcomings -- 3 Other uses of humanitarian visas and instances of ad-hoc entry measures -- 4 Value of a common EU framework on protection entries -- 4.1. The debate on the need of EU legislation on protected entries -- 4.2. Recommendations for the adoption of common legislation on humanitarian visas -- 4.2.1 Subjective right -- 4.2.2 Procedural guarantees -- 5 Conclusion -- Appendix -- Chapter 5: Humanitarian Admission to Germany - Access vs. Rights ? -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Admission in exceptional individual cases -- 6.3 Quota-based admission at federal level: Ad hoc schemes for individuals fleeing Syria -- 6.3.1 HAP Syria 1 - 3: Procedure and beneficiaries -- 6.3.2 Admissions on the basis of the EU-Turkey-Statement: HAP Turkey -- 6.4 Humanitarian admission schemes at Länder level -- 6.4.1 Private sponsorship programmes for relatives of Syrian nationals in Germany -- 6.4.2 Controversies raised by private sponsorship: Duration of financial commitments -- 6.5 The German resettlement programme -- 6.5.1 Beneficiaries of resettlement -- 6.5.2 Resettlement procedures -- 6.5.3 Germany's commitment to the EU resettlement programme: A game of numbers -- 6.6 Combining resettlement with community sponsorship: The NesT-Programme -- 6.6.1 The mentorship scheme as novelty to resettlement -- 6.6.2 NesT - Weak resettlement or improved private-sponsorship? -- 6.7 Access vs. rights? -- 6.7.1 The quality of protection and the method of arrival -- 6.7.1.1 Reception and place of residence -- 6.7.1.2 Duration of stay and options of permanent settlement -- 6.7.1.3 Access to work, social benefits and language courses -- 6.7.1.4 The travel document as 'Achilles heel' of resettlement refugee status 6.7.2 The changing laws and policies regarding family reunification -- 6.7.2.1 Family reunification depends on the method of arrival -- 6.7.2.2 Family reunification depends on the time of arrival: The changing laws and policies regarding beneficiaries of subsidiary protection -- 6.8 Conclusion -- Chapter 6: Humanitarian Admission to Belgium -- Introduction -- 1 The Legislation -- 2 The Administrative Practices and Case Law -- Conclusion: The Pending Questions -- Part 3. Claiming Humanitarian Admission. Survival Strategies and Litigation Attempts -- Chapter 7: Unpacking Vulnerability: An Ethnographic Account of the Challenges of Implementing Resettlement Programmes in a Refugee Camp in Uganda -- Introduction -- 1 A Word on Method -- 2 Problematising Vulnerability -- 2.1 Conforming to Vulnerability Categories -- 2.2 Multiplying Soft Law Regimes -- 3 Unpacking UNHCR's Categories of Vulnerability -- 3.1 Dependency on aid system -- 3.2 Climate Change -- 3.3 Economic Dimension -- 3.4 Poor Infrastructure -- 3.5 Contested Concept of 'Family' -- 3.6 Conflict of Interest in the Provision of Aid Services -- 3.7 The Exercise of Discretion by Aid Agencies -- 4 Escaping Vulnerability: Survival Strategies -- Conclusion -- Chapter 8: Making the Case X& -- X for the Humanitarian Visa -- Part 4. Some Future Prospects on Humanitarian Admission to Europe -- Chapter 9: The Objective of Resettlement in an EU Constitutional Perspective -- Introduction -- 1. The emerging EU resettlement law -- 1.1. Emphasis on resettlement in the context of crisis -- 1.2. Elements of the emerging EU resettlement law -- 2. The controversies on the objective of resettlement -- 2.1. Towards replacing territorial asylum procedures? -- 2.2. Towards externalising responsibility? -- 3. The constitutional objective of resettlement 3.1. Resettlement as a component of the Common European Asylum System -- 3.2. Objective I: Providing international protection -- 3.3. Objective II: Complementing territorial asylum procedures -- 3.4. Objective III: Sharing international responsibility -- Conclusion -- Chapter 10: EU Initiatives on a European Humanitarian Visa -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The concept of humanitarian visas within the EU Legal framework -- 2.1 What do we mean by humanitarian visa? -- 2.2. Humanitarian visas and EU fundamental rights -- 3. Current Regulatory Framework -- 4. For a comprehensive approach to humanitarian visas: EU Parliament vs. European Commission and Council -- 4.1 From the Treaty of Amsterdam to the Stockholm Programme -- 4.2. From the Stockholm Programme to the migration crisis -- 4.3 The LIBE Committee's legislative own-initiative report -- 5. Some concluding observations -- Conclusion: The Role of the Judge in Controlling the Genuine Enjoyment of the Substance of the Rights -- The Long-term Path: Visa Facilitation and Suppression -- The Short-term Path: Judicial Control |
ctrlnum | (ZDB-30-PQE)EBC6405727 (ZDB-30-PAD)EBC6405727 (ZDB-89-EBL)EBL6405727 (OCoLC)1319620457 (DE-599)BVBBV048220679 |
discipline | Politologie |
discipline_str_mv | Politologie |
edition | 1st ed |
format | Electronic eBook |
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The Right to Asylum and its Paradoxes -- Chapter 1: Humanitarian Admission Under Universal Human Rights Law: Some Observations Regarding the International Covenants -- Introduction -- 1 A Major Discrepancy Between Moral Claim and Legal Reality -- 2 Observations -- 2.1 The Scope of Human Rights - Territory, Jurisdiction and Beyond? -- 2.2 Extraterritorial Jurisdiction According to the ICCPR and the ICESCR -- 2.2.1 The Standard of the ICCPR -- 2.2.2 The Standard of the ICESCR -- 2.3 The Exercise of Jurisdiction and Resulting Human Rights Obligations in Embassies -- 2.4 Inside Jurisdiction and/or Territory, but Outside Full Human Rights Protection -- Conclusion and Outlook -- Chapter 2: Humanitarian Admission and the Charter of Fundamental Rights -- Introduction -- Between a Rock and a Hard Place: The Plight of the Syrian Family and the Externalisation of Border Control by the EU -- The Common European Asylum System (CEAS) -- Schengen and the EU Legal Framework on Visas -- Protected Entry Procedures and Humanitarian Visas</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">The Problem of the 'Foot in the Door' to the EU -- The Situation of the Syrian Family -- The ECJ's Interpretation of EU Law -- The Application of the EU Fundamental Rights Framework to Humanitarian Visas -- The Political Questions: Policy and Legislative Discussions at the EU Level -- Conclusion -- Chapter 3: Is Access to Asylum the Same as Access to Justice? -- Introduction -- 1. The Setting of the Play: The Right of Asylum, a Right 'of the Foot in the Door' -- 2. The Need for Legal Avenues -- 3. X &amp -- X: Does EU LAW require EU States to Open Legal Avenues for Asylum Seekers? -- 4. A Right Understanding of the Visa Code? -- 4.1 The text -- 4.2 The Inconstancy of the Criteria of Intention -- 4.3 The Forgotten Possibility for a Prolongation -- 5. Scope of Application of EU Asylum Law -- 6. Consequences on the Application of the EU Charter -- 7. The scope of territorial jurisdiction of the European Convention of Human Rights -- 8. Access to Justice and the Criteria of the Availability of an Alternative -- 9. Bridging the Gaps in Access to Justice: the Global Compact for Refugees -- Part 2. Humanitarian Admission Under Domestic Law. Between Formalised Procedures and Informal Practices -- Chapter 4: Humanitarian Admission to Italy through Humanitarian Visas and Corridors -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Humanitarian corridors for beneficiaries of protection -- 2.1 Legal basis of the humanitarian corridors -- 2.2 The MoUs for the humanitarian corridors: signatories, selection of countries and number of humanitarian visas -- 2.3 The process of identification and selection of beneficiaries for the humanitarian corridors -- 2.4 Criteria to identify the beneficiaries -- 2.4.1 'Vulnerability' -- 2.4.2 Integration in Italy and avoidance of secondary movements -- 2.5 Reception of beneficiaries: legal status and support provided after arrival</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">2.6 Perspectives for enhancement and replication of the humanitarian corridors in other countries -- 2.7 Shortcomings -- 3 Other uses of humanitarian visas and instances of ad-hoc entry measures -- 4 Value of a common EU framework on protection entries -- 4.1. The debate on the need of EU legislation on protected entries -- 4.2. Recommendations for the adoption of common legislation on humanitarian visas -- 4.2.1 Subjective right -- 4.2.2 Procedural guarantees -- 5 Conclusion -- Appendix -- Chapter 5: Humanitarian Admission to Germany - Access vs. Rights ? -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Admission in exceptional individual cases -- 6.3 Quota-based admission at federal level: Ad hoc schemes for individuals fleeing Syria -- 6.3.1 HAP Syria 1 - 3: Procedure and beneficiaries -- 6.3.2 Admissions on the basis of the EU-Turkey-Statement: HAP Turkey -- 6.4 Humanitarian admission schemes at Länder level -- 6.4.1 Private sponsorship programmes for relatives of Syrian nationals in Germany -- 6.4.2 Controversies raised by private sponsorship: Duration of financial commitments -- 6.5 The German resettlement programme -- 6.5.1 Beneficiaries of resettlement -- 6.5.2 Resettlement procedures -- 6.5.3 Germany's commitment to the EU resettlement programme: A game of numbers -- 6.6 Combining resettlement with community sponsorship: The NesT-Programme -- 6.6.1 The mentorship scheme as novelty to resettlement -- 6.6.2 NesT - Weak resettlement or improved private-sponsorship? -- 6.7 Access vs. rights? -- 6.7.1 The quality of protection and the method of arrival -- 6.7.1.1 Reception and place of residence -- 6.7.1.2 Duration of stay and options of permanent settlement -- 6.7.1.3 Access to work, social benefits and language courses -- 6.7.1.4 The travel document as 'Achilles heel' of resettlement refugee status</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">6.7.2 The changing laws and policies regarding family reunification -- 6.7.2.1 Family reunification depends on the method of arrival -- 6.7.2.2 Family reunification depends on the time of arrival: The changing laws and policies regarding beneficiaries of subsidiary protection -- 6.8 Conclusion -- Chapter 6: Humanitarian Admission to Belgium -- Introduction -- 1 The Legislation -- 2 The Administrative Practices and Case Law -- Conclusion: The Pending Questions -- Part 3. Claiming Humanitarian Admission. Survival Strategies and Litigation Attempts -- Chapter 7: Unpacking Vulnerability: An Ethnographic Account of the Challenges of Implementing Resettlement Programmes in a Refugee Camp in Uganda -- Introduction -- 1 A Word on Method -- 2 Problematising Vulnerability -- 2.1 Conforming to Vulnerability Categories -- 2.2 Multiplying Soft Law Regimes -- 3 Unpacking UNHCR's Categories of Vulnerability -- 3.1 Dependency on aid system -- 3.2 Climate Change -- 3.3 Economic Dimension -- 3.4 Poor Infrastructure -- 3.5 Contested Concept of 'Family' -- 3.6 Conflict of Interest in the Provision of Aid Services -- 3.7 The Exercise of Discretion by Aid Agencies -- 4 Escaping Vulnerability: Survival Strategies -- Conclusion -- Chapter 8: Making the Case X&amp -- X for the Humanitarian Visa -- Part 4. Some Future Prospects on Humanitarian Admission to Europe -- Chapter 9: The Objective of Resettlement in an EU Constitutional Perspective -- Introduction -- 1. 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For a comprehensive approach to humanitarian visas: EU Parliament vs. European Commission and Council -- 4.1 From the Treaty of Amsterdam to the Stockholm Programme -- 4.2. From the Stockholm Programme to the migration crisis -- 4.3 The LIBE Committee's legislative own-initiative report -- 5. 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genre | (DE-588)1071861417 Konferenzschrift gnd-content (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content (DE-588)1071861417 Konferenzschrift 17.05.2018-18.05.2018 Halle (Saale) gnd-content |
genre_facet | Konferenzschrift Aufsatzsammlung Konferenzschrift 17.05.2018-18.05.2018 Halle (Saale) |
id | DE-604.BV048220679 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T19:50:31Z |
indexdate | 2025-01-02T13:17:57Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9783845298603 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-033601423 |
oclc_num | 1319620457 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-2070s |
owner_facet | DE-2070s |
physical | 1 Online-Ressource (371 Seiten) |
psigel | ZDB-30-PQE ZDB-30-PQE HWR_PDA_PQE |
publishDate | 2020 |
publishDateSearch | 2020 |
publishDateSort | 2020 |
publisher | Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Schriften zum Migrationsrecht |
spelling | Foblets, Marie-Claire Verfasser aut Humanitarian Admission to Europe The Law between Promises and Constraints 1st ed Baden-Baden Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft 2020 ©2020 1 Online-Ressource (371 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Schriften zum Migrationsrecht v.30 Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources Cover -- Introduction: Humanitarian Admission to Europe. From Policy Developments to Legal Controversies and Litigation -- Introduction -- 1 Policy Developments Towards Humanitarian Admission to Europe -- 1.1 From 'Legal Avenues' and 'Safe Pathways', to 'Humanitarian Visas' and other 'Protected Entry Procedures' -- 1.2 Policy Developments at EU Level. A Focus on Resettlement -- 2 Litigation for Humanitarian Admission to Europe -- 3 A Cautious and Reserved Judicial Intervention -- 3.1 The CJEU Invoking the Limits to its Competence of Judicial Review -- 3.2. Some Limits to the Intervention of Courts in Policy Debates on Humanitarian admission to Europe -- 4 The Revolving Doors of the Rule of Law -- 5 The Law Between Promises and Constraints -- Part 1. Humanitarian Admission Under International and EU Law. The Right to Asylum and its Paradoxes -- Chapter 1: Humanitarian Admission Under Universal Human Rights Law: Some Observations Regarding the International Covenants -- Introduction -- 1 A Major Discrepancy Between Moral Claim and Legal Reality -- 2 Observations -- 2.1 The Scope of Human Rights - Territory, Jurisdiction and Beyond? -- 2.2 Extraterritorial Jurisdiction According to the ICCPR and the ICESCR -- 2.2.1 The Standard of the ICCPR -- 2.2.2 The Standard of the ICESCR -- 2.3 The Exercise of Jurisdiction and Resulting Human Rights Obligations in Embassies -- 2.4 Inside Jurisdiction and/or Territory, but Outside Full Human Rights Protection -- Conclusion and Outlook -- Chapter 2: Humanitarian Admission and the Charter of Fundamental Rights -- Introduction -- Between a Rock and a Hard Place: The Plight of the Syrian Family and the Externalisation of Border Control by the EU -- The Common European Asylum System (CEAS) -- Schengen and the EU Legal Framework on Visas -- Protected Entry Procedures and Humanitarian Visas The Problem of the 'Foot in the Door' to the EU -- The Situation of the Syrian Family -- The ECJ's Interpretation of EU Law -- The Application of the EU Fundamental Rights Framework to Humanitarian Visas -- The Political Questions: Policy and Legislative Discussions at the EU Level -- Conclusion -- Chapter 3: Is Access to Asylum the Same as Access to Justice? -- Introduction -- 1. The Setting of the Play: The Right of Asylum, a Right 'of the Foot in the Door' -- 2. The Need for Legal Avenues -- 3. X & -- X: Does EU LAW require EU States to Open Legal Avenues for Asylum Seekers? -- 4. A Right Understanding of the Visa Code? -- 4.1 The text -- 4.2 The Inconstancy of the Criteria of Intention -- 4.3 The Forgotten Possibility for a Prolongation -- 5. Scope of Application of EU Asylum Law -- 6. Consequences on the Application of the EU Charter -- 7. The scope of territorial jurisdiction of the European Convention of Human Rights -- 8. Access to Justice and the Criteria of the Availability of an Alternative -- 9. Bridging the Gaps in Access to Justice: the Global Compact for Refugees -- Part 2. Humanitarian Admission Under Domestic Law. Between Formalised Procedures and Informal Practices -- Chapter 4: Humanitarian Admission to Italy through Humanitarian Visas and Corridors -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Humanitarian corridors for beneficiaries of protection -- 2.1 Legal basis of the humanitarian corridors -- 2.2 The MoUs for the humanitarian corridors: signatories, selection of countries and number of humanitarian visas -- 2.3 The process of identification and selection of beneficiaries for the humanitarian corridors -- 2.4 Criteria to identify the beneficiaries -- 2.4.1 'Vulnerability' -- 2.4.2 Integration in Italy and avoidance of secondary movements -- 2.5 Reception of beneficiaries: legal status and support provided after arrival 2.6 Perspectives for enhancement and replication of the humanitarian corridors in other countries -- 2.7 Shortcomings -- 3 Other uses of humanitarian visas and instances of ad-hoc entry measures -- 4 Value of a common EU framework on protection entries -- 4.1. The debate on the need of EU legislation on protected entries -- 4.2. Recommendations for the adoption of common legislation on humanitarian visas -- 4.2.1 Subjective right -- 4.2.2 Procedural guarantees -- 5 Conclusion -- Appendix -- Chapter 5: Humanitarian Admission to Germany - Access vs. Rights ? -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Admission in exceptional individual cases -- 6.3 Quota-based admission at federal level: Ad hoc schemes for individuals fleeing Syria -- 6.3.1 HAP Syria 1 - 3: Procedure and beneficiaries -- 6.3.2 Admissions on the basis of the EU-Turkey-Statement: HAP Turkey -- 6.4 Humanitarian admission schemes at Länder level -- 6.4.1 Private sponsorship programmes for relatives of Syrian nationals in Germany -- 6.4.2 Controversies raised by private sponsorship: Duration of financial commitments -- 6.5 The German resettlement programme -- 6.5.1 Beneficiaries of resettlement -- 6.5.2 Resettlement procedures -- 6.5.3 Germany's commitment to the EU resettlement programme: A game of numbers -- 6.6 Combining resettlement with community sponsorship: The NesT-Programme -- 6.6.1 The mentorship scheme as novelty to resettlement -- 6.6.2 NesT - Weak resettlement or improved private-sponsorship? -- 6.7 Access vs. rights? -- 6.7.1 The quality of protection and the method of arrival -- 6.7.1.1 Reception and place of residence -- 6.7.1.2 Duration of stay and options of permanent settlement -- 6.7.1.3 Access to work, social benefits and language courses -- 6.7.1.4 The travel document as 'Achilles heel' of resettlement refugee status 6.7.2 The changing laws and policies regarding family reunification -- 6.7.2.1 Family reunification depends on the method of arrival -- 6.7.2.2 Family reunification depends on the time of arrival: The changing laws and policies regarding beneficiaries of subsidiary protection -- 6.8 Conclusion -- Chapter 6: Humanitarian Admission to Belgium -- Introduction -- 1 The Legislation -- 2 The Administrative Practices and Case Law -- Conclusion: The Pending Questions -- Part 3. Claiming Humanitarian Admission. Survival Strategies and Litigation Attempts -- Chapter 7: Unpacking Vulnerability: An Ethnographic Account of the Challenges of Implementing Resettlement Programmes in a Refugee Camp in Uganda -- Introduction -- 1 A Word on Method -- 2 Problematising Vulnerability -- 2.1 Conforming to Vulnerability Categories -- 2.2 Multiplying Soft Law Regimes -- 3 Unpacking UNHCR's Categories of Vulnerability -- 3.1 Dependency on aid system -- 3.2 Climate Change -- 3.3 Economic Dimension -- 3.4 Poor Infrastructure -- 3.5 Contested Concept of 'Family' -- 3.6 Conflict of Interest in the Provision of Aid Services -- 3.7 The Exercise of Discretion by Aid Agencies -- 4 Escaping Vulnerability: Survival Strategies -- Conclusion -- Chapter 8: Making the Case X& -- X for the Humanitarian Visa -- Part 4. Some Future Prospects on Humanitarian Admission to Europe -- Chapter 9: The Objective of Resettlement in an EU Constitutional Perspective -- Introduction -- 1. The emerging EU resettlement law -- 1.1. Emphasis on resettlement in the context of crisis -- 1.2. Elements of the emerging EU resettlement law -- 2. The controversies on the objective of resettlement -- 2.1. Towards replacing territorial asylum procedures? -- 2.2. Towards externalising responsibility? -- 3. The constitutional objective of resettlement 3.1. Resettlement as a component of the Common European Asylum System -- 3.2. Objective I: Providing international protection -- 3.3. Objective II: Complementing territorial asylum procedures -- 3.4. Objective III: Sharing international responsibility -- Conclusion -- Chapter 10: EU Initiatives on a European Humanitarian Visa -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The concept of humanitarian visas within the EU Legal framework -- 2.1 What do we mean by humanitarian visa? -- 2.2. Humanitarian visas and EU fundamental rights -- 3. Current Regulatory Framework -- 4. For a comprehensive approach to humanitarian visas: EU Parliament vs. European Commission and Council -- 4.1 From the Treaty of Amsterdam to the Stockholm Programme -- 4.2. From the Stockholm Programme to the migration crisis -- 4.3 The LIBE Committee's legislative own-initiative report -- 5. Some concluding observations -- Conclusion: The Role of the Judge in Controlling the Genuine Enjoyment of the Substance of the Rights -- The Long-term Path: Visa Facilitation and Suppression -- The Short-term Path: Judicial Control Europäische Union (DE-588)5098525-5 gnd rswk-swf Asyl (DE-588)4143260-5 gnd rswk-swf Mitgliedsstaaten (DE-588)4170174-4 gnd rswk-swf Aufenthaltsrecht (DE-588)4143382-8 gnd rswk-swf Humanität (DE-588)4026147-5 gnd rswk-swf Flüchtling (DE-588)4017604-6 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)1071861417 Konferenzschrift gnd-content (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content (DE-588)1071861417 Konferenzschrift 17.05.2018-18.05.2018 Halle (Saale) gnd-content Europäische Union (DE-588)5098525-5 b Mitgliedsstaaten (DE-588)4170174-4 s Flüchtling (DE-588)4017604-6 s Humanität (DE-588)4026147-5 s Asyl (DE-588)4143260-5 s Aufenthaltsrecht (DE-588)4143382-8 s DE-604 Leboeuf, Luc Sonstige oth Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Foblets, Marie-Claire Humanitarian Admission to Europe : The Law between Promises and Constraints Baden-Baden : Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft,c2020 9783848757305 |
spellingShingle | Foblets, Marie-Claire Humanitarian Admission to Europe The Law between Promises and Constraints Cover -- Introduction: Humanitarian Admission to Europe. From Policy Developments to Legal Controversies and Litigation -- Introduction -- 1 Policy Developments Towards Humanitarian Admission to Europe -- 1.1 From 'Legal Avenues' and 'Safe Pathways', to 'Humanitarian Visas' and other 'Protected Entry Procedures' -- 1.2 Policy Developments at EU Level. A Focus on Resettlement -- 2 Litigation for Humanitarian Admission to Europe -- 3 A Cautious and Reserved Judicial Intervention -- 3.1 The CJEU Invoking the Limits to its Competence of Judicial Review -- 3.2. Some Limits to the Intervention of Courts in Policy Debates on Humanitarian admission to Europe -- 4 The Revolving Doors of the Rule of Law -- 5 The Law Between Promises and Constraints -- Part 1. Humanitarian Admission Under International and EU Law. The Right to Asylum and its Paradoxes -- Chapter 1: Humanitarian Admission Under Universal Human Rights Law: Some Observations Regarding the International Covenants -- Introduction -- 1 A Major Discrepancy Between Moral Claim and Legal Reality -- 2 Observations -- 2.1 The Scope of Human Rights - Territory, Jurisdiction and Beyond? -- 2.2 Extraterritorial Jurisdiction According to the ICCPR and the ICESCR -- 2.2.1 The Standard of the ICCPR -- 2.2.2 The Standard of the ICESCR -- 2.3 The Exercise of Jurisdiction and Resulting Human Rights Obligations in Embassies -- 2.4 Inside Jurisdiction and/or Territory, but Outside Full Human Rights Protection -- Conclusion and Outlook -- Chapter 2: Humanitarian Admission and the Charter of Fundamental Rights -- Introduction -- Between a Rock and a Hard Place: The Plight of the Syrian Family and the Externalisation of Border Control by the EU -- The Common European Asylum System (CEAS) -- Schengen and the EU Legal Framework on Visas -- Protected Entry Procedures and Humanitarian Visas The Problem of the 'Foot in the Door' to the EU -- The Situation of the Syrian Family -- The ECJ's Interpretation of EU Law -- The Application of the EU Fundamental Rights Framework to Humanitarian Visas -- The Political Questions: Policy and Legislative Discussions at the EU Level -- Conclusion -- Chapter 3: Is Access to Asylum the Same as Access to Justice? -- Introduction -- 1. The Setting of the Play: The Right of Asylum, a Right 'of the Foot in the Door' -- 2. The Need for Legal Avenues -- 3. X & -- X: Does EU LAW require EU States to Open Legal Avenues for Asylum Seekers? -- 4. A Right Understanding of the Visa Code? -- 4.1 The text -- 4.2 The Inconstancy of the Criteria of Intention -- 4.3 The Forgotten Possibility for a Prolongation -- 5. Scope of Application of EU Asylum Law -- 6. Consequences on the Application of the EU Charter -- 7. The scope of territorial jurisdiction of the European Convention of Human Rights -- 8. Access to Justice and the Criteria of the Availability of an Alternative -- 9. Bridging the Gaps in Access to Justice: the Global Compact for Refugees -- Part 2. Humanitarian Admission Under Domestic Law. Between Formalised Procedures and Informal Practices -- Chapter 4: Humanitarian Admission to Italy through Humanitarian Visas and Corridors -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Humanitarian corridors for beneficiaries of protection -- 2.1 Legal basis of the humanitarian corridors -- 2.2 The MoUs for the humanitarian corridors: signatories, selection of countries and number of humanitarian visas -- 2.3 The process of identification and selection of beneficiaries for the humanitarian corridors -- 2.4 Criteria to identify the beneficiaries -- 2.4.1 'Vulnerability' -- 2.4.2 Integration in Italy and avoidance of secondary movements -- 2.5 Reception of beneficiaries: legal status and support provided after arrival 2.6 Perspectives for enhancement and replication of the humanitarian corridors in other countries -- 2.7 Shortcomings -- 3 Other uses of humanitarian visas and instances of ad-hoc entry measures -- 4 Value of a common EU framework on protection entries -- 4.1. The debate on the need of EU legislation on protected entries -- 4.2. Recommendations for the adoption of common legislation on humanitarian visas -- 4.2.1 Subjective right -- 4.2.2 Procedural guarantees -- 5 Conclusion -- Appendix -- Chapter 5: Humanitarian Admission to Germany - Access vs. Rights ? -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Admission in exceptional individual cases -- 6.3 Quota-based admission at federal level: Ad hoc schemes for individuals fleeing Syria -- 6.3.1 HAP Syria 1 - 3: Procedure and beneficiaries -- 6.3.2 Admissions on the basis of the EU-Turkey-Statement: HAP Turkey -- 6.4 Humanitarian admission schemes at Länder level -- 6.4.1 Private sponsorship programmes for relatives of Syrian nationals in Germany -- 6.4.2 Controversies raised by private sponsorship: Duration of financial commitments -- 6.5 The German resettlement programme -- 6.5.1 Beneficiaries of resettlement -- 6.5.2 Resettlement procedures -- 6.5.3 Germany's commitment to the EU resettlement programme: A game of numbers -- 6.6 Combining resettlement with community sponsorship: The NesT-Programme -- 6.6.1 The mentorship scheme as novelty to resettlement -- 6.6.2 NesT - Weak resettlement or improved private-sponsorship? -- 6.7 Access vs. rights? -- 6.7.1 The quality of protection and the method of arrival -- 6.7.1.1 Reception and place of residence -- 6.7.1.2 Duration of stay and options of permanent settlement -- 6.7.1.3 Access to work, social benefits and language courses -- 6.7.1.4 The travel document as 'Achilles heel' of resettlement refugee status 6.7.2 The changing laws and policies regarding family reunification -- 6.7.2.1 Family reunification depends on the method of arrival -- 6.7.2.2 Family reunification depends on the time of arrival: The changing laws and policies regarding beneficiaries of subsidiary protection -- 6.8 Conclusion -- Chapter 6: Humanitarian Admission to Belgium -- Introduction -- 1 The Legislation -- 2 The Administrative Practices and Case Law -- Conclusion: The Pending Questions -- Part 3. Claiming Humanitarian Admission. Survival Strategies and Litigation Attempts -- Chapter 7: Unpacking Vulnerability: An Ethnographic Account of the Challenges of Implementing Resettlement Programmes in a Refugee Camp in Uganda -- Introduction -- 1 A Word on Method -- 2 Problematising Vulnerability -- 2.1 Conforming to Vulnerability Categories -- 2.2 Multiplying Soft Law Regimes -- 3 Unpacking UNHCR's Categories of Vulnerability -- 3.1 Dependency on aid system -- 3.2 Climate Change -- 3.3 Economic Dimension -- 3.4 Poor Infrastructure -- 3.5 Contested Concept of 'Family' -- 3.6 Conflict of Interest in the Provision of Aid Services -- 3.7 The Exercise of Discretion by Aid Agencies -- 4 Escaping Vulnerability: Survival Strategies -- Conclusion -- Chapter 8: Making the Case X& -- X for the Humanitarian Visa -- Part 4. Some Future Prospects on Humanitarian Admission to Europe -- Chapter 9: The Objective of Resettlement in an EU Constitutional Perspective -- Introduction -- 1. The emerging EU resettlement law -- 1.1. Emphasis on resettlement in the context of crisis -- 1.2. Elements of the emerging EU resettlement law -- 2. The controversies on the objective of resettlement -- 2.1. Towards replacing territorial asylum procedures? -- 2.2. Towards externalising responsibility? -- 3. The constitutional objective of resettlement 3.1. Resettlement as a component of the Common European Asylum System -- 3.2. Objective I: Providing international protection -- 3.3. Objective II: Complementing territorial asylum procedures -- 3.4. Objective III: Sharing international responsibility -- Conclusion -- Chapter 10: EU Initiatives on a European Humanitarian Visa -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The concept of humanitarian visas within the EU Legal framework -- 2.1 What do we mean by humanitarian visa? -- 2.2. Humanitarian visas and EU fundamental rights -- 3. Current Regulatory Framework -- 4. For a comprehensive approach to humanitarian visas: EU Parliament vs. European Commission and Council -- 4.1 From the Treaty of Amsterdam to the Stockholm Programme -- 4.2. From the Stockholm Programme to the migration crisis -- 4.3 The LIBE Committee's legislative own-initiative report -- 5. Some concluding observations -- Conclusion: The Role of the Judge in Controlling the Genuine Enjoyment of the Substance of the Rights -- The Long-term Path: Visa Facilitation and Suppression -- The Short-term Path: Judicial Control Europäische Union (DE-588)5098525-5 gnd Asyl (DE-588)4143260-5 gnd Mitgliedsstaaten (DE-588)4170174-4 gnd Aufenthaltsrecht (DE-588)4143382-8 gnd Humanität (DE-588)4026147-5 gnd Flüchtling (DE-588)4017604-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)5098525-5 (DE-588)4143260-5 (DE-588)4170174-4 (DE-588)4143382-8 (DE-588)4026147-5 (DE-588)4017604-6 (DE-588)1071861417 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Humanitarian Admission to Europe The Law between Promises and Constraints |
title_auth | Humanitarian Admission to Europe The Law between Promises and Constraints |
title_exact_search | Humanitarian Admission to Europe The Law between Promises and Constraints |
title_exact_search_txtP | Humanitarian Admission to Europe The Law between Promises and Constraints |
title_full | Humanitarian Admission to Europe The Law between Promises and Constraints |
title_fullStr | Humanitarian Admission to Europe The Law between Promises and Constraints |
title_full_unstemmed | Humanitarian Admission to Europe The Law between Promises and Constraints |
title_short | Humanitarian Admission to Europe |
title_sort | humanitarian admission to europe the law between promises and constraints |
title_sub | The Law between Promises and Constraints |
topic | Europäische Union (DE-588)5098525-5 gnd Asyl (DE-588)4143260-5 gnd Mitgliedsstaaten (DE-588)4170174-4 gnd Aufenthaltsrecht (DE-588)4143382-8 gnd Humanität (DE-588)4026147-5 gnd Flüchtling (DE-588)4017604-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Europäische Union Asyl Mitgliedsstaaten Aufenthaltsrecht Humanität Flüchtling Konferenzschrift Aufsatzsammlung Konferenzschrift 17.05.2018-18.05.2018 Halle (Saale) |
work_keys_str_mv | AT fobletsmarieclaire humanitarianadmissiontoeuropethelawbetweenpromisesandconstraints AT leboeufluc humanitarianadmissiontoeuropethelawbetweenpromisesandconstraints |