Europe is experiencing the mass movements of displaced people in a way that it has largely been immune from for decades. The manifestations of the 'migration crisis' are as disparate as the building of fences to stop people crossing normally peaceful borders, the deaths of people transported by smugglers in unseaworthy boats, EU political leaders bickering over a Common European Asylum System and the numbers they will or will not allow into their respective countries, and contentious responses to the disaster that continues to unfold in Syria. Alongside this we also see an upsurge of grass-roots compassion, solidarity and assistance to those whose human suffering on a grand scale in and around Europe constitutes the reality behind the rhetoric. FMR 51 includes 43 articles on 'Destination: Europe', plus five 'general' articles.
Europe is experiencing the mass movements of displaced people in a way that it has largely been immune from for decades. Europe is experiencing the ma...
Europe need not renounce its freedom of movement: it should instead develop a better controlled mobility regime. It would then, in effect, much better...
A number of myths surrounding refugee protection may obscure our understanding and complicate the search for solutions, but there are also clear and r...
Creating space for smugglers and failing to provide humanitarian assistance are European failures. Opening legal routes to Europe could deal with both...
While the high number of migrants and refugees arriving in Europe in 2015 has increased pressures and tensions, this is not a crisis beyond the capabi...
While makeshift camps, such as those that have proliferated around Europe, may form spaces of resourcefulness and agency which cannot be accommodated ...
Border practices at the Italy-Austria border are part of a wider trend of questionable practices used by EU Member States which render irrelevant both...