Journal of Common Market Studies
Volume 56, Issue 1, 2018, Pages 141-156

Refugee Protection and Burden-Sharing in the European Union (Article)

Bauböck R.*
  • a European University Institute, Italy

Abstract

This article starts with discussing principles for a globally just system of refugee protection to which states contribute either by admitting refugees for resettlement or by supporting refugee integration in other states. Such a system requires relatively strong assurances of compliance by the states involved, which are absent in the international arena. In the European Union, however, the Member States form a predetermined set with prior commitments and supranational institutions that facilitate effective burden sharing. The article traces the failure of the EU's relocation scheme to meet this expectation to misconceptions how to determine fair shares, to incomplete prior harmonization of normative standards, and to contradictions between the Dublin Regulation's principle of assigning responsibility to first countries of entry, on the one hand, and the Schengen principle of open internal borders, on the other hand. © 2017 University Association for Contemporary European Studies and John Wiley & Sons Ltd

Author Keywords

EU refugee policy Refugee protection asylum, burden-sharing Dublin Regulation

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85031087458&doi=10.1111%2fjcms.12638&partnerID=40&md5=b35bb5a9adfc7fdfd42047a39e1d58ac

DOI: 10.1111/jcms.12638
ISSN: 00219886
Cited by: 19
Original Language: English