This book explores the norms, practices, and main actors in the EU Migration System of Governance (EUMSG). Bringing a fresh perspective to the analysis of asylum and migration in Europe, the volume unpacks the European Union’s approach to migration and points to the principles and actions of EU member states. Moreover, it explores the EUMSG’s performance through the lenses of three alternative yet coexistent understandings of justice (non-domination, impartiality, and mutual recognition), thereby overcoming a unilateral ethical viewpoint and moving away from the ‘open-closed borders’ debate.
Inhoudsopgave
Chapter 1. The EU migration system and global justice: An Introduction.- Chapter 2. EU’s Normative Ambivalence and the Migrant Crisis: (in)Actions of (in)Justice.- Chapter 3. The Immigration Policy of the United Kingdom: British Exceptionalism and the Renewed Quest for Control.- Chapter 4. Justice at the edge of Europe: migration, asylum policy and global justice in Greece in the context of the European Migration System of Governance.- Chapter 5. From this side of the Mediterranean: Italy, migration and justice perspectives.- Chapter 6. Between logistification and minimalism: migration policies in France and global justice.- Chapter 7. Constraints on global justice. Insecurity and national repositioning in the case of Hungary.- Chapter 8. Out but still in: Norway’s approach to migration and asylum as a non-EU state.- Chapter 9. Germany’s ‘Atypical’ Leadership in the EU Migration System of Governance and its Normative Dimension.- Chapter 10. The EU Migration System and Global Justice: An Assessment.
Over de auteur
Michela Ceccorulli is Senior Assistant Professor of International Relations at the University of Bologna, Italy.
Enrico Fassi is Assistant Professor of International Relations at the Catholic University in Milan, Italy.
Sonia Lucarelli is Associate Professor of International Relations and Pan-European Security at the University of Bologna, Italy.