13 Nov 2024

Global Asylum Governance and the European Union’s Role

Rights and Responsibility in the Implementation of the United Nations Global Compact on Refugees

Sergio Carrera

0
Download Publication

87 Downloads

We are pleased to announce the release of this open access book by Sergio Carrera, Eleni Karageorgiou, Gamze Ovacik, Nikolas Feith Tan, which provides a detailed examination of the relationship and compatibility between asylum governance and refugee protection and human rights, and the responsibilities for states and other implementing actors in cases of human rights violations.

This book analyses the characteristics and impacts of existing and emerging asylum governance instruments and their practical implementation in selected countries hosting large communities of refugees around the world. Particular focus is given to the cases of Bangladesh, Brazil, Canada, Jordan, Niger, Serbia, South Africa and Turkey. Attention is put into regional and country-specific asylum instruments and actors from the perspective of their effectiveness, fairness and consistency with refugee protection and human rights standards as well as the UN GCR commitments. By doing so, the book identifies key lessons learned and offers a critical view on policies framed as `promising practices’ so as to inform future steps in the UN GCR implementation and asylum governance more generally. As such, the book provides a better understanding of the concept of “mobility” in asylum governance, and the ways in which it is articulated into legal and policy instruments framed as “protection” and – in the language of the UN GCR – “third country solutions” for refugee mobility, including resettlement, private/community sponsorships, humanitarian corridors, in the European Union and around the world.

This is the final book of the EU-funded ASILE project, which was coordinated by CEPS.

READ IT HERE 

Related Publications

Browse through the list of related publications.

A cold, hard look in the mirror

Issues and priorities for the EU’s area of freedom, security and justice in the wake of Trump 2.0

Irregularising Human Mobility

EU Migration Policies and the European Commission’s Role

A rule of law agenda for 2030

Priorities for a principled area of freedom, security and justice

Irregularised migration and the next European Commission

Ensuring enforcement and intersectional monitoring of the rule of law and fundamental rights

Reconstitutionalising privacy

EU-US data transfers and their impact on the rule of law, rights and trust