European Migration Policy from Amsterdam to Lisbon
The end of the responsibility decade?
Nomos, 1. Edition 2010, 199 Pages
The product is part of the series
Aktuelle Materialien zur Internationalen Politik
Description
It is a commonplace: EU asylum and immigration cooperation would look rather different without the dominant role of Europe's interior ministries. Policy instead remains broadly restrictive, illiberal and short on international solidarity.
Given the Amsterdam Treaty of 1999, the continued prevalence of these traits is perhaps surprising. The Treaty formally upgraded the European Commission and Parliament and could well have heralded a major shift in the character of policy.
From an academic perspective, interior ministries' success in asserting themselves in policymaking and their preoccupation with increasing control over migration might be put down to a desire to expand their autonomy and power. Analysing important policy initiatives of the past decade, this book points to a different reality.
Rather than institutional self-interest, interior ministries are motivated by an acute awareness of their responsibilities to EU citizens. This awareness has made them resistant even to those political actors directly elected by citizens, and has led to a control policy with potentially deleterious side effects for those they seek to represent.
Given the Amsterdam Treaty of 1999, the continued prevalence of these traits is perhaps surprising. The Treaty formally upgraded the European Commission and Parliament and could well have heralded a major shift in the character of policy.
From an academic perspective, interior ministries' success in asserting themselves in policymaking and their preoccupation with increasing control over migration might be put down to a desire to expand their autonomy and power. Analysing important policy initiatives of the past decade, this book points to a different reality.
Rather than institutional self-interest, interior ministries are motivated by an acute awareness of their responsibilities to EU citizens. This awareness has made them resistant even to those political actors directly elected by citizens, and has led to a control policy with potentially deleterious side effects for those they seek to represent.
Bibliographical data
Edition | 1 |
---|---|
ISBN | 978-3-8329-5859-6 |
Subtitle | The end of the responsibility decade? |
Publication Date | Sep 20, 2010 |
Year of Publication | 2010 |
Publisher | Nomos |
Format | Softcover |
Language | englisch |
Pages | 199 |
Medium | Book |
Product Type | Scientific literature |
Reviews
»Zum einen besticht das Buch durch die theoretische Perspektive, die Wege aus einem dichotomen Diskurs weist, der festgefahren und damit fruchtlos geworden scheint. Zum anderen ist die Kenntnisfülle von hohem Interesse, die einen gebündelten Überblick über die relevanten Entwicklungen seit Amsterdam bietet. Geeignet ist das Buch für die Lehre in höheren Studiensemestern sowie für alle, die sich forschend mit dem Politikfeld der Migrationspolitk befassen.«
Annette Jünemann, PVS 4/11
Annette Jünemann, PVS 4/11
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