Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://elea.unisa.it/xmlui/handle/10556/5657
Abstract: Through the analysis of the critical issues that emerged during the implementation of the relocation quotas adopted as provisional measures by the Council to address the migration crisis of 2015, this contribution aims to provide a key to read the fallout from the related regulatory and judicial events on the principle of solidarity that should govern the European Union’s immigration and asylum policy. It also attempts, thanks to the analysis of the solutions announced in the 2020 Pact on Migration and Asylum and the solidarity mechanisms provided for therein, to check whether they are suitable of ensuring the fair sharing of solidarity-based responsibility between the Member States, regardless of the emergency and statecentric approaches which have so far characterised the measures taken and the proposals to amend the Dublin system.
Appears in Collections:Freedom, Security & Justice: European Legal Studies (2021), n.2

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