Retracing the Right to Free Movement: Mapping a Path Forward

D. R. Myślińska
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

As a founding principle of the EU, a prerequisite for the exercise of most other EU rights, and a key component of EU integration, the freedom of movement right has carried great political and practical importance. It has also been one of the most contested, politically abused, and poorly understood of EU rights, particularly in the context of mobility of nationals from Central and Eastern Europe (“CEE”). Notably, misinformation regarding the free movement right that was spread by the media, politicians, and the public helped to propel both the UK’s renegotiation of its EU membership and, ultimately, its exit from the Union. Other EU-15 State politicians have also been perpetuating myths about freedom of movement and immigration. Scholars addressing free movement, even in the context of Brexit, have devoted little attention to this right’s conceptualization as it has evolved over time, to how EU branches other than the European Court of Justice have approached it, or to how CEE nationals have been positioned and impacted by mobility’s legal framework. Although some critical scholars have critiqued derogations from the free movement right imposed on CEE nationals in the aftermath of their States’ accession to the EU, they have also failed to situate their analysis within a broader look at the creation and application of the legal framework behind mobility. CEE movers in the UK and other EU-15 States have tended to be racialized by the media, politicians, and the public – that is, described and approached by individuals and institutions in ways which denigrate or assume their inferiority. Hence, several tenets of critical race theory (“CRT”) and critical whiteness studies (“CWS”) that expound the relationship between race, power, society, and law are helpful to the analysis of their mobility. This Article argues that the freedom of movement right has always been limited, and that CEE nationals’ mobility rights have been especially restricted by both EU statutes and case law – and further impeded by restrictive Member State policies. Ultimately, the right of free movement has been created and consistently applied in a way as to benefit EU-15 States’ economies, while approaching CEE movers as mere units of production. This broader understanding of this right is necessary to make Brexit negotiations more meaningful, and debates about intra-EU movers in other EU-15 States more responsible. Moreover, the discussion here also critiques CRT and CWS for overlooking the significance of immigrant background and of white minority ethnicities in the conceptualization and experience of equality. I suggest that both theoretical frameworks need to not only look beyond the black-white binary, but also consider contemporary transnational power dynamics to arrive at a more flexible and nuanced picture of micro-level racial and ethnic power relations in today’s globalized world.
追溯自由迁徙的权利:绘制前进的道路
作为欧盟的一项创始原则,是行使大多数其他欧盟权利的先决条件,也是欧盟一体化的关键组成部分,迁徙自由权具有重大的政治和现实意义。它也是最具争议的,政治上被滥用的,以及对欧盟权利的理解不足的一个,特别是在中欧和东欧(“CEE”)国民流动的背景下。值得注意的是,媒体、政客和公众传播的关于自由迁徙权的错误信息,推动了英国重新谈判其欧盟成员国身份,并最终退出欧盟。其他欧盟15国的政治家也一直在延续有关迁徙自由和移民自由的神话。即使在英国脱欧的背景下,研究自由流动的学者也很少关注这一权利的概念化,因为它随着时间的推移而演变,也很少关注欧洲法院以外的欧盟分支机构如何处理这一权利,或者中东欧国家的国民如何被流动性的法律框架定位和影响。尽管一些批判性的学者批评了中东欧国家加入欧盟后对其国民的自由流动权利的减损,但他们也未能将他们的分析置于更广泛的视角中,即流动性背后法律框架的创造和应用。英国和其他欧盟15国的中东欧推动者往往被媒体、政治家和公众种族化——也就是说,个人和机构以诋毁或假设他们低人一等的方式描述和接近他们。因此,批判种族理论(“CRT”)和批判白人研究(“CWS”)的一些原则阐述了种族、权力、社会和法律之间的关系,有助于分析他们的流动性。本文认为,行动自由权利一直受到限制,中东欧国家国民的行动权利尤其受到欧盟法规和判例法的限制,并受到成员国限制性政策的进一步阻碍。最终,自由流动的权利被创造出来,并以一种有利于欧盟15国经济的方式持续实施,而将中东欧的推动者仅仅视为生产单位。对这一权利的更广泛理解是必要的,这将使英国脱欧谈判更有意义,并使其他欧盟15国关于欧盟内部推动者的辩论更负责任。此外,这里的讨论也批评了CRT和CWS忽视了移民背景和白人少数民族在平等概念和经验中的重要性。我认为,这两种理论框架不仅需要超越黑白二元对立,还需要考虑当代跨国权力动态,以便在当今全球化的世界中,对微观层面的种族和民族权力关系形成更灵活、更细致的图景。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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