{"title":"The crisis of the Common European Asylum System: rethinking solidarity in light of Human Rights","authors":"Paola Di Nunzio","doi":"10.21814/unio.8.2.4760","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In 2015, the unprecedented arrival of refugees and irregular migrants in the European Union (EU) put a strain on the Common European Asylum System (CEAS), thus exposing a number of deficiencies in EU external border, asylum and migration policy. The need to reform the system became urgent and the EU was presented with both a challenge and an opportunity to further advance towards a much-needed consensual and long-term solution for the harmonisation of the asylum system, standing on the basis of solidarity and responsibility-sharing. This paper argues that the new comprehensive approach to migration and asylum praised by the European Commission (EC) is still missing in the recent Pact on Migration and Asylum of 2020, which represents more a missed opportunity than the real reform that the CEAS needs. The chosen legislative path, the dualistic understanding concerning the approach to migrants, and the new solidarity mechanism envisioned in the Pact show how the lack of consensus among Member States, the tendency towards the creation of a “Fortress Europe”, and an asymmetric idea of inter-state solidarity prevail, preventing the development of a common European framework for migration management that is both effective and in line with the EU’s values and objectives. This paper further argues that, if the EU fails to shift the paradigm of solidarity, the system is at risk of remaining fractured and incapable of withstanding the future challenges of migration. A new framework must be grounded on the principle of solidarity, as defined in the Article 80 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) which, in turn, needs to move from a state-centred approach to a concept of solidarity based on affected individuals, thus setting its foundations on a human rights basis. The EU needs, in fact, to strongly step up as a humanitarian actor and place protection and responsibility-sharing at the centre of its agenda: the protection of fundamental human rights in its territory and beyond is at stake.","PeriodicalId":6966,"journal":{"name":"Acta - Unio Internationalis Contra Cancrum","volume":"38 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-04-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Acta - Unio Internationalis Contra Cancrum","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.21814/unio.8.2.4760","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In 2015, the unprecedented arrival of refugees and irregular migrants in the European Union (EU) put a strain on the Common European Asylum System (CEAS), thus exposing a number of deficiencies in EU external border, asylum and migration policy. The need to reform the system became urgent and the EU was presented with both a challenge and an opportunity to further advance towards a much-needed consensual and long-term solution for the harmonisation of the asylum system, standing on the basis of solidarity and responsibility-sharing. This paper argues that the new comprehensive approach to migration and asylum praised by the European Commission (EC) is still missing in the recent Pact on Migration and Asylum of 2020, which represents more a missed opportunity than the real reform that the CEAS needs. The chosen legislative path, the dualistic understanding concerning the approach to migrants, and the new solidarity mechanism envisioned in the Pact show how the lack of consensus among Member States, the tendency towards the creation of a “Fortress Europe”, and an asymmetric idea of inter-state solidarity prevail, preventing the development of a common European framework for migration management that is both effective and in line with the EU’s values and objectives. This paper further argues that, if the EU fails to shift the paradigm of solidarity, the system is at risk of remaining fractured and incapable of withstanding the future challenges of migration. A new framework must be grounded on the principle of solidarity, as defined in the Article 80 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) which, in turn, needs to move from a state-centred approach to a concept of solidarity based on affected individuals, thus setting its foundations on a human rights basis. The EU needs, in fact, to strongly step up as a humanitarian actor and place protection and responsibility-sharing at the centre of its agenda: the protection of fundamental human rights in its territory and beyond is at stake.
2015年,前所未有的难民和非正规移民涌入欧盟,给欧洲共同庇护制度(CEAS)带来了压力,暴露出欧盟在外部边境、庇护和移民政策方面的一些缺陷。改革这一制度的需要变得紧迫,欧盟面临着挑战和机遇,可以在团结和责任分担的基础上,进一步推动达成一项亟需的共识和长期解决方案,以协调庇护制度。本文认为,在最近的《2020年移民和庇护公约》(Pact on migration and asylum of 2020)中,欧盟委员会(EC)称赞的移民和庇护的新综合方法仍然缺失,这与其说是CEAS需要的真正改革,倒不如说更像是错失了机会。所选择的立法路径、对移民处理方式的二元理解以及《公约》所设想的新的团结机制表明,成员国之间缺乏共识、建立“欧洲堡垒”的趋势以及国家间团结的不对称观念盛行,阻碍了既有效又符合欧盟价值观和目标的欧洲共同移民管理框架的发展。本文进一步认为,如果欧盟不能转变团结的范式,该体系将面临继续分裂的风险,无法承受未来移民的挑战。新的框架必须以《欧洲联盟运作条约》第80条所界定的团结原则为基础,而这一原则又需要从以国家为中心的做法转向以受影响个人为基础的团结概念,从而在人权基础上奠定其基础。事实上,欧盟需要大力加强作为人道主义行动者的作用,并将保护和责任分担置于其议程的中心:保护其领土内外的基本人权受到威胁。