Abstract
The control of international immigration touches the core of national sovereignty. The regulation of admission is usually seen as the deepest expression of self-determination. Despite this, over the last decade immigration has become a thoroughly Europeanized policy field, and this process has significantly contributed to European integration. This chapter reconstructs the evolution of the process of Europeanization in the domain of immigration, and analyses its dynamics. It focuses on the following questions: To what extent, and why, have EU member states opted to cooperate on the highly sensitive issue of migration? What effect does Europeanization have on the rights of immigrants—do we see a restriction or an expansion of rights? The chapter demonstrates that, while national governments have chosen to Europeanize the issue of immigration primarily in order to foster and to enhance migration control, in doing so they have actually put constraints on their ability to regulate immigration, which in turn has led to an increase in the protection of immigrants’ rights.
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Notes
- 1.
Passports have previously existed, but pervasive and systematic control of movement is closely linked to the emergence of modern nation states , as Torpey (2000) demonstrates. The French revolutionary regime, moreover, initially also used passports to control those considered ideologically unreliable or socially marginal (Mau et al. 2012, 17). For the disciplinary function of border control see Chap. 10, in this volume.
- 2.
The restricted focus on these two sets of actors does not imply that non-state actors do not play an important role in the process of Europeanization of immigration policies. However, national government s , as well as the EU institutions, hold a key position in decision-making and in the implementation of European policies. Moreover, the impact of non-state actors differs considerably. Wunderlich (2011), for instance, showed that international organizations such as IOM and UNHCR are important brokers of Europeanization when it comes to the implementation of immigration policies (see also Chap. 9, in this volume). While acknowledging the importance of think tanks and lobby groups, Boswell and Geddes (2011: 211) noted the irrelevance of grass-roots movements, concluding that mobilization on behalf of migrants (not by them) proves to be successful. Finally, Menz (2011) noted that employers ’ organizations have little influence on Europeanization in the domain of migration and asylum.
- 3.
The co-decision procedure, introduced by the Treaty of Maastricht in 1992, is referred today to as ordinary legislation procedure. In a co-decision procedure the European Parliament and the Council jointly adopt legislation.
- 4.
Approaches that equate Europeanization with restriction on migrants’ rights also ignore that Europeanization has actually led to a complex stratification of migrants’ rights. For a comprehensive discussion of the multidimensionality of migrants’ rights produced by EU law, see Carmel and Paul (2013).
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Abdou, L.H. (2016). The Europeanization of Immigration Policies. In: Amelina, A., Horvath, K., Meeus, B. (eds) An Anthology of Migration and Social Transformation. IMISCOE Research Series. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-23666-7_7
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