Migration and Asylum Governance in CEE Countries: Between Historical Legacies and the Europeanisation Process

IF 0.3 Q4 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Goranka Lalić Novak, Teo Giljević
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Migration patterns in post-socialist Central and Eastern Europe countries were different when compared to old EU member states. During the period after WWII until 1990, those patterns involved primarily migration to and from other CEE countries (and the Soviet Union). In former Yugoslavia, a less oppressive regime, together with a high demand for workers in Western European countries, opened up space for rather massive labour emigration during 1960s and 1970s. After the collapse of previous regimes and during the transition period in the 1990s, CEE countries experienced an increase in immigration; however, relatively small numbers of immigrants have been arriving from outside Europe. At the same time, under the EU accession requirements, those countries had to quickly develop migration policies and align their legislation with acquis communautaire on migration and border security. The mass migrations in 2015 and 2016 opened a new chapter regarding migration and asylum governance in CEE countries. Some of them, such as Visegrad countries, strongly opposed the EU initiatives in the area of migration and asylum, which influenced their relations with EU institutions but also other member states. The paper aims to explore the relationship between the transition and Europeanisation on one side, and the development of migration and asylum governance on the other side in CEE countries, based on the path-dependency approach. The paper focuses on the question to what extent (post)socialist factors influence national migration and asylum governance and policies which are at the same time governed by the EU regulatory framework. It is debated whether the effectiveness of the transfer of values and norms relating to migration during the accession process has been replaced by a “national turn” after joining the EU.
中东欧国家的移民和庇护治理:历史遗产与欧洲化进程之间
与旧的欧盟成员国相比,后社会主义时代的中欧和东欧国家的移民模式有所不同。在二战后至1990年期间,这些模式主要涉及往返于其他中东欧国家(和苏联)的移民。在前南斯拉夫,一个压迫性较低的政权,加上西欧国家对工人的高需求,在20世纪60年代和70年代为大量劳动力移民开辟了空间。在前政权垮台后和1990年代的过渡时期,中东欧国家的移民人数有所增加;然而,来自欧洲以外的移民人数相对较少。与此同时,根据加入欧盟的要求,这些国家必须迅速制定移民政策,并使其立法与关于移民和边境安全的共同体法律保持一致。2015年和2016年的大规模移民开启了中东欧国家移民和庇护治理的新篇章。其中一些国家,如维谢格拉德国家,强烈反对欧盟在移民和庇护领域的举措,这影响了它们与欧盟机构以及其他成员国的关系。本文旨在基于路径依赖方法,探讨中东欧国家的转型和欧洲化与移民和庇护治理发展之间的关系。本文关注的问题是(后)社会主义因素在多大程度上影响国家移民和庇护管理以及同时受欧盟监管框架管辖的政策。有人争论,在加入欧盟后,与移民有关的价值观和规范在加入过程中的有效性是否已被“国家转向”所取代。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
25.00%
发文量
12
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