
Intertwining Criminal Justice and Immigration Control in the EU
Description
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The contributions to this book explore the conceptual and philosophical underpinnings of EU and national policies intertwining criminal and migration law, as well as their practical use (and abuse). They analyse migration control through criminal law from multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary perspectives, incorporating insights from law, philosophy, and criminology. The book revisits fundamental questions on the suitability of criminal law to regulate and govern migration and provides insights as to whether and how the law should be amended to limit the negative consequences of the criminalisation of migration. The authors critique the key legal challenges crimmigration poses in terms of legality, fundamental rights, and rule of law adherence. Finally, this volume outlines, through concrete examples, how criminalisation of migration translates into the emergence of hostile environments for migrants and those who assist them.
This book will be of interest to criminologists, sociologists, legal scholars, and all those engaged in studies on migration and the European Union.
Reviews / Votes
This outstanding edited volume, gathering contributions from top specialists, brings EU migration law and EU criminal law in conversation with each other, delivering a thorough and topical exploration of the (ab)uses of criminal justice mechanisms for migration enforcement purposes, combining legal-doctrinal, theoretical, and socio-legal insights. It makes a critical contribution to ongoing debates, pushing the limits of "crimmigration" research in key ways that will remain influential for years to come.Violeta Moreno-Lax, Professor, ICREA-Universitat de Barcelona & Queen Mary University of London
This insightful and thought-provoking edited volume critically examines the intersection of criminal justice and immigration control in the EU. Offering a compelling analysis of crimmigration, it highlights its profound legal, ethical, and human rights implications. A must-read for scholars, policymakers, and anyone concerned with justice, migration, and fundamental rights.
Anne Weyembergh, Professor and Vice-Rector of Universite libre de Bruxelles (ULB) for External Relations and Development Cooperation
In many parts of the world, not least in the European Union, criminal law is increasingly used as an additional tool to regulate and govern migration. The contributors to this volume explore the many facets of this policy development and offer a cogently critical account from an interdisciplinary perspective.
Bruno De Witte, Professor of European Law, Maastricht University
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Persons
Evangelia (Lilian) Tsourdi is Professor and Jean Monnet Chair in European Migration Law and Governance at the Law Faculty of Maastricht University.
Valsamis Mitsilegas is a Professor of European and Global Law and Dean of the School of Law and Social Justice at the University of Liverpool. He is the author of 11 books and over 150 articles and chapters in the fields of European and transnational criminal law, migration law, security, human rights and the rule of law.
Content
Niovi Vavoula and Evangelia (Lilian) Tsourdi
2. The EU's Facilitators' Package - In the Twilight of Fighting Organised Crime and the (Over)Criminalisation of Solidarity: A Comparative Evaluation
Johannes Keiler
3. Building Limits to the Over-Criminalisation of Facilitating Irregular Migration: The Kinsa case
Francesca Cancellaro and Stefano Zirulia
4. Who Is the "Vulnerable" Victim? Trafficked and Smuggled Persons as Victims of Crime Under EU Law
Maja Grundler
5. Crimmigration as Hate Speech
Alessandro Spena
6. Migrants' Agency in Smuggling Routes: Criminalising Practices and Socio-Legal Implications in the EU
Flavia Patane
7. Crimmigration through Administrative Surveillance of Civil Society at the EU's External Borders,
Niovi Vavoula and Evangelia (Lilian) Tsourdi
8. Punitive Immigration Control for Difficult, Troublesome, or "Low Recognition" Asylum Seekers: On Waterbed Theory and Globalised Vagrancy Law
Galina Cornelisse
9. From Prevention to Repression: Penal Populism and the Changing Paradigm of Criminal Law to Counter Irregular Migration and Humanitarian Assistance
Marta Minetti
10. Afterword: The Criminalisation of Migration as Preventive (In)Justice
Valsamis Mitsilegas
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