A Comparative Analysis of Regulations on Involuntary Loss of Nationality in the European Union. CEPS Liberty and Security in Europe, 75/December 2014


Autoria(s): de Groot, Gerard-René; Vink, Maarten Peter
Data(s)

01/01/2015

Resumo

This study examines the workings of the Common European Asylum System (CEAS), in order to assess the need and potential for new approaches to ensure access to protection for people seeking it in the EU, including joint processing and distribution of asylum seekers. Rather than advocating the addition of further complexity and coercion to the CEAS, the study proposes a focus on front-line reception and streamlined refugee status determination, in order to mitigate the asylum challenges facing Member States, and vindicate the rights of asylum seekers and refugees according to the EU acquis and international legal standards. Joint processing could contribute to front-line reception and processing capacity, but is no substitute for proper investment in national systems. The Dublin system as currently configured leads inexorably to increasing coercion and detention, and must thus be reconfigured to remove coercion as a principle and ensure consistency with human rights and other fundamental values of the EU.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aei.pitt.edu/59227/1/No_75_ILEC_Loss_of_citizenship_final_MAP.pdf

de Groot, Gerard-René and Vink, Maarten Peter (2015) A Comparative Analysis of Regulations on Involuntary Loss of Nationality in the European Union. CEPS Liberty and Security in Europe, 75/December 2014. [Policy Paper]

Relação

http://www.ceps.eu/node/9949

http://aei.pitt.edu/59227/

Palavras-Chave #asylum policy
Tipo

Policy Paper

NonPeerReviewed