Enhancing the Common European Asylum System and Alternatives to Dublin.

Autor: Elspeth Guild, Cathryn Costello, Madeline Garlick , Violeta Moreno-Lax
Ciudad: Bruselas
Editorial: CEPS Paperbacks, Justice and Home Affairs
Fecha: 04/09/2015
Comentario

Elspeth Guild, Cathryn Costello, Madeline Garlick , Violeta Moreno-Lax.: Enhancing the Common European Asylum System and Alternatives to Dublin, CEPS,  2015.

  • Upon request by the LIBE committee, this study examines the reasons why the Dublin system of allocation of responsibility for asylum seekers does not work effectively from the viewpoint of Member States or asylum-seekers. It argues that as long as it is based on the use of coercion against asylum seekers, it cannot serve as an effective tool to address existing imbalances in the allocation of responsibilities among Member States. The EU is faced with two substantial challenges: first, how to prevent unsafe journeys and risks to the lives of people seeking international protection in the EU; and secondly, how to organise the distribution of related responsibilities and costs among the Member States. This study addresses these issues with recommendations aimed at resolving current practical, legal and policy (Texto completo).

Comentarios relacionados realizados por las mismas autoras:

  • The 2015 Refugee Crisis in the European Union. CEPS.eu. According to the latest figures from UNHCR, more than 310,000 people have arrived in Italy and Greece this year alone to seek refuge in the European Union. Italy’s reception services are stretched beyond capacity and the situation is even more serious in Greece, where 200,000 refugees have arrived from Turkey so far this year – a staggering increase from 43,000 in all of 2014. In this CEPS Policy Brief, the authors examine the real issues regarding these arrivals, particularly those arriving from across the Mediterranean, and make concrete recommendations to alleviate the problems that both state authorities and refugees are encountering as a result. 

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Financiado por: Ministerio de Trabajo e Inmigración
Coordinado por: Universidad de León