Mobilitätspolitiken

Die Arbeiten innerhalb dieser Kategorie untersuchen Richtlinien, Gesetze, Verfahren, Vorschriften oder Maßnahmen in Bezug auf Mobilität. Mobilität bezieht sich im Allgemeinen auf freie und legale Bewegungen, beispielsweise die intraregionale Freizügigkeit von EU-BürgerInnen innerhalb des Schengen-Raums.

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Free Movement Emancipates, but What Freedom Is This?

Authors Vesco Paskalev
Book Title Debating European citizenship
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1 Book Chapter

Between Mobility and Migration: The Consequences and Governance of Intra-European Movement

Authors Mark van Ostaijen, Peter Scholten
Year 2018
Book Title Between Mobility and Migration
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2 Book Chapter

Whose Freedom of Movement Is Worth Defending?

Authors Sarah Fine
Book Title Debating European citizenship
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3 Book Chapter

Reading Too Much and Too Little into the Matter? Latent Limits and Potentials of EU Freedom of Movement

Authors Julija Sardelić
Book Title Debating European citizenship
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4 Book Chapter

Freedom of Movement Needs to Be Defended as the Core of EU Citizenship

Authors Floris De Witte
Book Title Debating European citizenship
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6 Book Chapter

Freedom of movement under attack : is it worth defending as the core of EU citizenship?

Authors Floris DE WITTE, Rainer BAUBÖCK, Jo SHAW
Year 2016
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7 Working Paper

What to Say to Those Who Stay? Free Movement is a Human Right of Universal Value

Authors Kieran Oberman
Book Title Debating European citizenship
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8 Book Chapter

The commodification of mobile workers in Europe - A comparative perspective on capital and labour in Austria, the Netherlands and Sweden

Authors Mark van Ostaijen, Ursula Reeger, Karin Zelano
Year 2017
Journal Name Comparative Migration Studies
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9 Journal Article

State Citizenship, EU Citizenship and Freedom of Movement

Authors Richard Bellamy
Book Title Debating European citizenship
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10 Book Chapter

Debating European citizenship

Authors Rainer BAUBÖCK
Year 2019
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11 Book

Role of European Mobility and its Impacts in Narratives, Debates and EU Reforms

Description
This project explores the economic, social, institutional and policy factors that have shaped the impacts of free movement in the EU and public debates about it. The project has three goals. First, to generate a deeper understanding of the nature and impacts of intra-EU mobility, focusing in particular on how countries’ institutional and policy environments shape the impacts of free movement on individuals, households, labour markets, public services and public finances. Second, to assess how political and media narratives about intra-EU mobility are formed, focusing on the role of traditional and social media, political discourse, and influential participants in public debates. Third, to evaluate the relationship between real and perceived impacts, examining the factors that drive realities and misperceptions about free movement and why these debates have unfolded in different ways across the EU. Research methods range from content analysis based on machine-learning techniques to multi-wave panel and survey experiments to theoretical and empirical analysis of the role of institutions and norms in shaping free movement and public debates about it. Project Partners: Budapest Business School, European Journalism Centre, Uppsala University, Pompeu Fabra University, International Centre for Migration Policy Development, University of Vienna, Maastricht University, TNS Opinion, Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz, King Juan Carlos University, University of Gothenburg, Migration Policy Institute Europe
Year 2017
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13 Project

Poland’s Perspective on the Intra-European Movement of Poles. Implications and Governance Responses

Authors Marta Kindler
Book Title Between Mobility and Migration
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15 Book Chapter

Immigration and Swiss-EU Free Movement of Persons: Question of a Safeguard Clause

Authors Michael Ambuehl, Sibylle Zuercher
Year 2015
Journal Name Swiss Political Science Review
Citations (WoS) 4
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16 Journal Article

Migrants', 'mobile citizens' and the borders of exclusion in the European Union

Authors Martin RUHS
Year 2018
Book Title Debating European citizenship
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17 Book Chapter

Migration and Citizenship: Normative Debates

Authors Rainer BAUBÖCK
Year 2012
Book Title Marc R. ROSENBLUM and Daniel J. TICHENOR (eds), Oxford Handbook of the Politics of International Migration, Oxford/New York, Oxford University Press, 2012, 594-613
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18 Book Chapter

Free Movement and Discrimination: Evidence from Europe, the United States, and Canada

Authors Willem Maas, W Maas
Year 2013
Journal Name European Journal of Migration and Law
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19 Journal Article

The privilege of free movement

Authors Saila Heinikoski
Year 2019
Journal Name Approaching Religion
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20 Journal Article

When poverty meets affluence: Migrant street workers in Scandinavia

Principal investigator Anne Britt Djuve (Project Leader), Jon Horgen Friberg (), Guri Tyldum ()
Description
The phenomenon of EU migrants who go abroad to beg, collect bottles, trade and do other types of informal “street work” (Adriaenssen 2011) has featured on the political agendas of most European countries over the last decade. While the EU framework was intended to encourage the free movement of labour, there is little regulation in place to address the free movement of poverty. As unwanted mobility from EU member states can no longer be stopped at the borders, European states have come to depend on internal policing and regulations in attempts to regulate these practices. Thus far, there has been little research into this particular form of mobility and the related institutional responses. This project addresses this knowledge gap. Drawing on theories of economic sociology and institutional theory, we will explore the causes for and outcomes of this mobility, its organisation and the development and impact of policies and discourses in countries of destination. As this mobility in many ways represents an “extreme” case of transnational migration and ethnic relations, knowledge about the mechanisms involved may challenge or strengthen assumptions within existing theories. The project will therefore engage with wider theoretical debates within the field of migration studies.
Year 2015
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21 Project

The engine of 'Europeanness'? : free movement, social transnationalism and European identification

Authors Ettore RECCHI
Year 2017
Book Title Daniel THYM (ed.), Questioning EU citizenship : judges and the limits of free movement and solidarity in the EU, London : Hart, 2017, Modern Studies in European Law, pp. 135-148
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22 Book Chapter

On Membership and Free Movement

Authors Tiziana Torresi
Book Title Citizenship Acquisition and National Belonging
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23 Book Chapter

The symbolic meaning of international mobility: EU–Morocco negotiations on visa facilitation

Authors Nora El Qadim
Year 2018
Journal Name Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 2
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25 Journal Article

Freedom of Movement vs. Exclusion: A Reinterpretation of the `Insider'- `Outsider' Divide in the European Union

Authors Mehmet Ugur, M UGUR
Year 1995
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 23
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26 Journal Article

Conclusions and Reflection

Authors Peter Scholten, Mark van Ostaijen
Book Title Between Mobility and Migration
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27 Book Chapter

Linking Citizenship to Income Undermines European Values. We Need Shared Criteria and Guidelines for Access to EU Citizenship

Authors Hannes Swoboda
Book Title Debating transformations of national citizenship
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28 Book Chapter

Freedom of Movement vs. Exclusion: A Reinterpretation of the ‘Insider'-‘Outsider’ Divide in the European Union

Authors Mehmet Ugur
Year 1995
Journal Name International Migration Review
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29 Journal Article

Free Movement? The Onward Migration of EU Citizens Born in Somalia, Iran, and Nigeria

Authors Jill Ahrens, Ilse van Liempt, Melissa Kelly
Year 2016
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
Citations (WoS) 26
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30 Journal Article

Commentary: A Citizenship without Social Rights? EU Freedom of Movement and Changing Access to Welfare Rights

Authors Roxana Barbulescu, A Favell
Year 2020
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
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31 Journal Article

Migration and Policies in the European Union: Highly Skilled Mobility, Free Movement of Labour and Recognition of Diplomas

Authors João Peixoto, Joao Peixoto
Year 2001
Journal Name International Migration
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32 Journal Article

The Multi-Level Governance of Intra EU Movement

Authors Jonas Hinnfors, Gregg Bucken-Knapp, Andrea Spehar, ...
Book Title Between Mobility and Migration
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33 Book Chapter

Crossing Over, Heading West and South: Mobility, Citizenship, and Employment in the Enlarged Europe

Authors Anna Triandafyllidou, Ettore Recchi
Book Title Labour Migration in Europe
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34 Book Chapter

Memory in Motion: Photographs in Suitcases

Authors Natalia Alonso Rey
Book Title Memories on the Move
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35 Book Chapter

Free Movement as a Means of Subject-Formation: Defending a More Relational Approach to EU Citizenship

Authors Päivi Johanna Neuvonen
Book Title Debating European citizenship
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36 Book Chapter

Pan-African Aspirations Drive a New Free Trade Pact

Authors Christopher Changwe Nshimbi
Year 2019
Journal Name Current History
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37 Journal Article

The intra-EU mobility regime: Differentiation, stratification and contradictions

Authors Godfried Engbersen, Peter Scholten, Arjen Leerkes, ...
Year 2017
Journal Name Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 5
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39 Journal Article

Morals and the Right to Free Movement: Insiders, outsiders and Europe’s migration crisis

Authors Saila Heinikoski
Year 2017
Journal Name Nordic Journal of Migration Research
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40 Journal Article

Europejska strategia zatrudnienia a swobodny przepływ osób

Year 2009
Book Title Polish labor market in the conditions of European integration
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41 Book Chapter

Reciprocity in welfare institutions and attitudes to free movement in EU receiving countries

Authors Moa MARTENSSON, Marcus ÖSTERMAN, Joakim PALME, ...
Year 2019
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43 Working Paper

Free Movement for Some: The Treatment of the Roma after the European Union’s Eastern Expansion

Authors Jacqueline S. Gehring, Jacqueline Gehring
Year 2013
Journal Name European Journal of Migration and Law
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44 Journal Article

EU Citizenship, Free Movement and Emancipation: A Rejoinder

Authors Floris De Witte
Book Title Debating European citizenship
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45 Book Chapter

Independent Choices and Extrinsic Pressure: EU Membership and the Development of Residence-Based Social Security Schemes in Finland

Authors Toomas Kotkas
Year 2016
Journal Name European Journal of Social Security
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46 Journal Article

Free Movement in the European Union: National Institutions vs Common Policies?

Authors Martin Ruhs
Year 2017
Journal Name International Migration
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47 Journal Article

The Internal Market at a Social Turn? Social dumping and the protection of workers

Authors Catherine Jacqueson
Year 2020
Journal Name European Journal of Social Security
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48 Journal Article

Free movement and equal treatment in an unequal union

Authors Susanne K. Schmidt, Dorte Sindbjerg Martinsen, Michael Blauberger
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal of European Public Policy
Citations (WoS) 4
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51 Journal Article

Migration and Free Movement of Workers in Western Europe

Authors HEINZ WERNER
Year 1974
Journal Name International Migration
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52 Journal Article

Settlement or Mobility? Immigrants’ Re-migration Decision-Making Process in a High-Income Country Setting

Authors Ilka Steiner
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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53 Journal Article

Free Movement and the Fragmentation of Family Reunification Rights

Authors Anne Staver
Year 2013
Journal Name European Journal of Migration and Law
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54 Journal Article

ON THE MOVE "The reality of free movement for young European citizens migrating in times of crisis

Principal investigator Mercedes Fernández (Project Manager Spanish partner)
Description
The project builds on the assumption that barriers to the exercise of fundamental rights, in this case free movement, cannot be addressed unless accurately identified. When these deal with specific population groups, such as young people, this is all the more relevant. The obstacles that young people face with respect to legislation, access to finance and resources, to name but a few, are very different from other age groups. Complementing the existing knowledge through this perspective enriches the understanding of existing barriers and obstacles to free movement in a targeted way. The project adopts a unique methodology that operates on several levels and allows for the collection, analysis and synthesis of information in a way that it sheds light into aspects of free movement that have not been explored. It uses a mixed-method approach that combines: a) empirical field research through structured interviews with young people and national authorities in the participating countries b) data collection and targeted legal research in all partner countries; c) socio-legal analysis of the data collected and d) comparative analysis of the findings. Further, the project will raise awareness at national and EU level on barriers to free movement.
Year 2015
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55 Project

EU migration and asylum policies

Authors Sybille Münch
Year 2018
Book Title Handbook of European Policies. Interpretive Approaches to the EU
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56 Book Chapter

Under Pressure? – Swedish Residence-Based Social Security and EU Citizenship

Authors Thomas Erhag
Year 2016
Journal Name European Journal of Social Security
Citations (WoS) 2
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57 Journal Article

Free Movement or Benefit Tourism: The Unreasonable Burden of Brey

Authors Herwig Verschueren
Year 2014
Journal Name European Journal of Migration and Law
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58 Journal Article

Promoting integration through mobility free movement and the ECOWAS Protocol

Authors Aderanti Adepoju, Alistair Boulton, Mariah Levin, ...
Year 2007
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59 Report

Institutional contexts of political conflicts around free movement in the European Union: a theoretical analysis

Authors Martin Ruhs, Joakim Palme
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal of European Public Policy
Citations (WoS) 1
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60 Journal Article

Role of European Mobility and its Impacts in Narratives, Debates and EU Reforms

Description
The overarching goal of the project is to understand the economic, social, institutional and policy factors that have shaped the impacts of free movement and public debates about it. It aims to help European policymakers develop policy responses that inspire public trust, ensure the fairness and sustainability of free movement, and maintain inclusive policies that reduce inequalities across the continent. First, the project will generate a deeper understanding of the nature and impacts of intra-EU mobility, focusing in particular on how countries’ institutional and policy environments shape the impacts of free movement on individuals, households, labour markets, public services and public finances. Second, it will assess how political and media narratives about intra-EU mobility are formed, focusing on the role of traditional and social media, political discourse, and influential participants in public debates. Third, it will assess the relationship between real and perceived impacts, examining the factors that drive realities and misperceptions about free movement and why these debates have unfolded in different ways across the EU. A consortium of researchers with deep understanding of policies and institutions across Europe will implement a multi-disciplinary research strategy. Cutting-edge research methods will range from content analysis based on machine-learning techniques to multi-wave panel and survey experiments to theoretical and empirical analysis of the role of institutions and norms in shaping free movement and public debates about it. The project combines qualitative and quantitative approaches, carefully integrating work packages to allow data and results to flow seamlessly between them. Policy specialists will develop concrete options for reforms. An experienced communications team will work with consortium members to develop accessible resources, ensuring wide reach to policymakers, media practitioners and influential stakeholders across Europe.
Year 2017
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61 Project

REMINDER: Role of European Mobility and its Impacts in Narratives, Debates and EU Reforms

Description
The overarching goal of the project is to understand the economic, social, institutional and policy factors that have shaped the impacts of free movement and public debates about it. It aims to help European policymakers develop policy responses that inspire public trust, ensure the fairness and sustainability of free movement, and maintain inclusive policies that reduce inequalities across the continent. First, the project will generate a deeper understanding of the nature and impacts of intra-EU mobility, focusing in particular on how countries’ institutional and policy environments shape the impacts of free movement on individuals, households, labour markets, public services and public finances. Second, it will assess how political and media narratives about intra-EU mobility are formed, focusing on the role of traditional and social media, political discourse, and influential participants in public debates. Third, it will assess the relationship between real and perceived impacts, examining the factors that drive realities and misperceptions about free movement and why these debates have unfolded in different ways across the EU. A consortium of researchers with deep understanding of policies and institutions across Europe will implement a multi-disciplinary research strategy. Cutting-edge research methods will range from content analysis based on machine-learning techniques to multi-wave panel and survey experiments to theoretical and empirical analysis of the role of institutions and norms in shaping free movement and public debates about it. The project combines qualitative and quantitative approaches, carefully integrating work packages to allow data and results to flow seamlessly between them. Policy specialists will develop concrete options for reforms. An experienced communications team will work with consortium members to develop accessible resources, ensuring wide reach to policymakers, media practitioners and influential stakeholders across Europe.
Year 2017
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62 Project

Demokratische Grenzen als Membranen

Authors Rainer BAUBÖCK
Year 2014
Journal Name Zeitschrift für Menschenrechte ; Journal for human rights, 2014, Vol. 8, No. 2, pp. 66-82
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63 Journal Article

Three generations of free movement of regional migrants in Mercosur : any influence from the EU?

Authors Leiza Maricel BRUMAT, Diego ACOSTA
Year 2019
Book Title [Migration Policy Centre]
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64 Book Chapter

Migration Without Borders: Essays on the Free Movement of People

Authors Yasmeen Abu-Laban
Year 2012
Journal Name Canadian Studies in Population
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65 Journal Article

The ECOWAS Free Movement Protocol and Diversity of Experiences of Different Categories of Migrants: A Qualitative Study

Authors Thomas Yeboah, Joseph Kofi Teye, Leander Kandilige, ...
Year 2020
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
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66 Journal Article

Consequences of Intra-European Movement for CEE Migrants in European Urban Regions

Authors Ursula Reeger
Book Title Between Mobility and Migration
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67 Book Chapter

the theory and practice of free movement in the EU

Authors peo hansen
Year 2018
Journal Name European Political Science
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68 Journal Article

Equality and the Free Movement of People: Citizenship and Internal Migration

Authors Willem Maas
Year 2018
Book Title Democratic Citizenship and the Free Movement of People
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71 Book Chapter

Discrimination in the Housing Market as an Impediment to European Labour Force Integration: the Case of Iceland

Authors Davio Freyr Bjornsson, G Zoega, Fredrik Kopsch, ...
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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73 Journal Article

‘All Citizens Now’: Intra-EU Mobility and Political Participation of British, Germans, Poles and Romanians in Western and Southern Europe

Authors Anna Triandafyllidou
Description
A key aspect of the European integration process is the right to free movement. Such a right is actually seen by both citizens and policy-makers as the core element embodying the notion of EU citizenship. ‘EU movers’, notably mobile EU citizens who have exercised their free movement rights and settled in a Member State different from the one in which they were born or raised, represent between 2% and 3% of the total population residing in the EU27. Their numbers have increased since 2004 and especially since 2007, when the Central Eastern European countries joined the EU. Such recent intra-EU mobility has been primarily economically motivated: EU citizens from the new Member States look for better job opportunities and life prospects. However, mobility has been a feature of European integration from early-on: people have moved from their Member State of origin to another Member State to pursue job or study opportunities, for family reasons (marriage for instance) or simply for better quality of life (looking for warmer climates and a slower pace of life) since the introduction of free movement rights.
Year 2012
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74 Report

Job Loss and Regional Mobility

Authors Kristiina Huttunen, J Moen, Kjell G. Salvanes, ...
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal of Labor Economics
Citations (WoS) 4
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75 Journal Article

Free Movement, Open Borders and the Global Gains from Labor Mobility [Global]

Authors Christian Dustmann, Ian Preston
Year 2019
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77 Working Paper

Migration in the enlarged European Union: Empirical evidence for labour mobility in the Baltic states

Authors J Kielyte, D Kancs
Year 2002
Journal Name JOURNAL OF BALTIC STUDIES
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79 Journal Article

Travelling home: Personal mobility and “new” Polish migrants in England

Year 2011
Journal Name Studia Migracyjne - Przegląd Polonijny
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80 Journal Article

Crisis of Schengen? The effect of two ‘migrant crises’ (2011 and 2015) on the free movement of people at an internal Schengen border

Authors Sara Casella Colombeau, Sara Casella Colombeau
Year 2020
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
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81 Journal Article

Mass Preferences for the Free Movement of People in Africa: A Public Opinion Analysis of 36 Countries

Authors Steven Gordon
Year 2021
Journal Name International Migration Review
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82 Journal Article

The Roma and European Union citizenship: in search of a humane answer from the EU

Authors Nuno Ferreira, Dora Kostakopoulou
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83 Journal Article

Immigration and internal mobility in Canada

Authors Michel Beine, M Beine, Serge Coulombe
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 2
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84 Journal Article

Should EU Citizens Living in other Member States Vote there in National Elections?

Authors Philippe CAYALA, Catriona SETH, Rainer BAUBÖCK
Year 2012
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85 Working Paper

Understanding International Immobility through Internal Migration: “Left behind” Nurses in the Philippines

Authors Yasmin Y. Ortiga, Romeo Luis A. Macabasag
Year 2020
Journal Name International Migration Review
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86 Journal Article

On Decolonising Borders and Regional Integration in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) Region

Authors Inocent Moyo
Year 2020
Journal Name SOCIAL SCIENCES-BASEL
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87 Journal Article

UK: Large-Scale European Migration and the Challenge to EU Free Movement

Authors Eleonore Kofman, Alessio D’Angelo
Book Title South-North Migration of EU Citizens in Times of Crisis
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89 Book Chapter

Regional Migration Governance (R_eMigra) A human-rights analysis of emerging mobility regimes

Description
On the basis of migration governance and legal pluralism theories, as well as on the basis of the developments in migration policies, the proposed research hypothesizes that the growing role of regional economic groups is likely to impact international migratory flows, bringing about, at the national level, a shift from migration control to migration management. A second hypothesis is that beyond trade and economic integration, regional initiatives have the potential to fulfil relevant functions, including the development of an appropriate normative framework for facilitating a human-rights-based approach to labour mobility. Third, the research proposes that as a consequence of this shift, the human rights protection available at the regional level can become much more effective. The research will develop an alternative human rights approach, based on the presumption that the regional migration approach may innovates in the exercise of sovereignty and human rights law. In order to achieve this, the proposed research will: - Contribute to migration governance by making regional processes, law and institutional developments a strong rationale for migration; -Develop an in-depth, country-level programme of research in two countries (Argentina and Thailand), in two regional integration projects (MERCOSUR in Latin America and ASEAN in Asia ); - Test the three hypotheses, relating to (1) the existing and emerging regional integration processes; (2) human rights effects of regionalism; (3) the interaction between regional integration processes and the formulation of migration and free movement provisions. The findings will contribute to multi-layered migration governance on the role of regional integration projects as venues for migration governance; to theories on how human rights law can respond to new forms of human mobility; and to the analysis of the diffusion of migration law in regional integration regimes – one of the most pressing issues of our time.
Year 2015
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90 Project

R_EMIGRA: Regional Migration Governance (R_eMigra) A human-rights analysis of emerging mobility regimes

Description
On the basis of migration governance and legal pluralism theories, as well as on the basis of the developments in migration policies, the proposed research hypothesizes that the growing role of regional economic groups is likely to impact international migratory flows, bringing about, at the national level, a shift from migration control to migration management. A second hypothesis is that beyond trade and economic integration, regional initiatives have the potential to fulfil relevant functions, including the development of an appropriate normative framework for facilitating a human-rights-based approach to labour mobility. Third, the research proposes that as a consequence of this shift, the human rights protection available at the regional level can become much more effective. The research will develop an alternative human rights approach, based on the presumption that the regional migration approach may innovates in the exercise of sovereignty and human rights law. In order to achieve this, the proposed research will: - Contribute to migration governance by making regional processes, law and institutional developments a strong rationale for migration; - Develop an in-depth, country-level programme of research in two countries (Argentina and Thailand), in two regional integration projects (MERCOSUR in Latin America and ASEAN in Asia ); - Test the three hypotheses, relating to (1) the existing and emerging regional integration processes; (2) human rights effects of regionalism; (3) the interaction between regional integration processes and the formulation of migration and free movement provisions. The findings will contribute to multi-layered migration governance on the role of regional integration projects as venues for migration governance; to theories on how human rights law can respond to new forms of human mobility; and to the analysis of the diffusion of migration law in regional integration regimes – one of the most pressing issues of our time.
Year 2015
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91 Project

Reciprocity in welfare institutions and normative attitudes in EU member states

Authors Moa MARTENSSON, Joakim PALME, Martin RUHS
Year 2019
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92 Working Paper

One Cannot Promote Free Movement of EU Citizens and Restrict Their Political Participation

Authors Dora Kostakopoulou
Book Title Debating European citizenship
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93 Book Chapter

Free Movement for Workers or Citizens? Reverse Discrimination in European Family Reunification Policies

Authors Anne Staver
Year 2018
Book Title Democratic Citizenship and the Free Movement of People
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94 Book Chapter

The New European Migration Laboratory: East Europeans in West European Cities

Authors Adrian Favell
Book Title Between Mobility and Migration
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95 Book Chapter

‘Feed them First, Then Ask Virtue of Them’: Broadening and Deepening Freedom of Movement

Authors Andrea Sangiovanni
Book Title Debating European citizenship
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96 Book Chapter

Internal market adjudication and the quality of life in Europe

Authors Gareth T. DAVIES
Year 2014
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97 Working Paper

Taking emigration seriously: a new agenda for research on free movement and welfare

Authors Cecilia Bruzelius
Year 2020
Journal Name Journal of European Public Policy
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98 Journal Article

Free Movement of Workers and the Self-employment issue. The Case of The “Polish Plumber” in France

Authors Małgorzata Patok
Year 2018
Journal Name Studia Migracyjne – Przegląd Polonijny
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99 Journal Article

Do National Activation Measures Stand the Test of European Law on the Free Movement of Workers and Jobseekers?

Year 2010
Journal Name EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MIGRATION AND LAW
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100 Journal Article
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