Destination Europe: states, borders and refugees - Professor Cathryn Costello (Refugee Studies Centre)

Event date
20 January 2016
Event time
17:00
Oxford week
Venue
Queen Elizabeth House
Speaker(s)

Series convenors: Professor Cathryn Costello and Stephanie Motz  

Wednesdays, Seminar Room 3  

Oxford Department of International Development, 3 Mansfield Road, Oxford OX1 3TB

In the absence of safe and legal routes to claim asylum, refugees currently make their own way to Europe, risking their lives in the process. They face many European crises: humanitarian ones at their places of arrival and border crossings; legal ones as some states flout their international and EU obligations, and security ones as rational fears become unduly associated with refugees. There are, of course, many Europes: the EU (with its elaborate Common European Asylum System); the wider Europe of the Council of Europe and pan-European human rights protection, encompassing Turkey; and the Europe of the Mediterranean, Mare Nostrum. Faced with the arrival of refugees in large numbers, the reactions and responsibilities of these various Europes will be considered. Reactions range from small-scale offers of relocation and resettlement; to military responses to human smuggling in Libya; to border closures of the Balkans and Central and Eastern Europe; and moves to accommodate large new refugee populations in Germany, Sweden and the other main destination states. The series will examine the implications for European integration, European values and the global refugee protection regime, taking a long and broad view. Legal, historical and political perspectives will be explored.

This seminar series complements Issue 51 of Forced Migration Review, published on 5 January 2016 and also titled 'Destination: Europe'.  

Seminars are free to attend and open to everyone. No registration is required. We hope to see you there!  

Found within

Public International Law