The future of the Common European Asylum System: in need of a more comprehensive burden-sharing approach

Awdur (Person)
Cyhoeddwr
Teitl y Gyfres
Manylion y Gyfres No.1, January 2008
Dyddiad Cyhoeddi January 2008
Math o Gynnwys

Abstract:

The Commission presented its Green Paper on the Future of the European Asylum System in June 2007. The Green Paper builds on the 2005 Hague Programme Action Plan with its objective of creating a common European asylum system. Such a system aims not only at establishing a level playing
field in protection standards across the Member States, but also to ensure a higher degree of solidarity
between them. According to the Commission, there is an urgent need for increased European solidarity
in the area of asylum and it wants to ensure that responsibility for processing asylum applications
and granting protection in the EU is shared equitably. Hence, one of the five chapters of the recent Green Paper is exclusively dedicated to the issue of “Solidarity and Burden-Sharing”. The background to this concern about solidarity is the fact that the distribution of asylum seekers and refugees in European countries appears highly inequitable. Moreover, earlier attempts at EU burdensharing
in this area have not been particularly effective. It will be argued here that this limited effectiveness is in part the result of specific shortcomings in the institutional design of existing EU burdensharing instruments. However, even a far-reaching reform of the existing instruments, even though it should be welcomed, is unlikely to achieve the objective of equalising responsibilities across the
Member States in this area. What the EU needs is a more comprehensive burden-sharing approach. In this paper I propose that such a new approach should be based on a new conception of burden sharing which entails both reactive and proactive elements.

Dolen Ffynhonnell Link to Main Source http://personal.lse.ac.uk/thielema/Papers-PDF/Sieps-2008.pdf
Categorïau Pwnc
Gwledydd / Rhanbarthau