International Migration and Refugee Law. Does Germany's Migration Policy Toward Syrian Refugees Comply?
(Sprache: Englisch)
Germany will spend around $6.6 billion to cope with an estimated 800,000 refugees expected to have entered the country in the year 2016; this reality indeed extending further into 2017. Despite this overwhelming number of people entering the country,...
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Germany will spend around $6.6 billion to cope with an estimated 800,000 refugees expected to have entered the country in the year 2016; this reality indeed extending further into 2017. Despite this overwhelming number of people entering the country, Chancellor Angela Merkel stated that there is "no legal limit to the number of asylum seekers Germany will take in in the coming years." The announcement by Merkel's coalition government followed Germany and Austria opening their borders to the large numbers of refugees making their way north and west from the Middle East, Africa and elsewhere. In particular, this statement came after the Syrian refugee crisis created the biggest refugee crisis the world has seen since the Second World War.Germany is seen as the immigration hub of Europe. It also happens to be the second most popular destination for immigrants after the United States of America. Germany is also the country in Europe with the highest numbers of foreign nationals to date. Germany established a new immigration law in 2005 which was born out of a realization that it was coming to terms with a demographic crisis stemming from an ageing population and further complimented by a sharp decline of national birth rates. In foresight, and within this unfortunate context, migration was seen by much of the German political class as an economic necessity, and the answer to the German economic and demographic time bomb.
Between the years 2009 and 2014, annual net migration in Germany rose from 100,000 to 580,000 individuals. Moreover, the inflow of foreign nationals increased from 266,000 to 790,000 individuals. As of January 2015, approximately 10% of residents in Germany were foreign nationals, with around 12% born outside the country. Naturally, these figures have all risen significantly following Merkel's decision to allow what has reached one million refugees and migrants into Germany across 2016 and moving into 2017. Moving from this reality, the research will
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focus on the importance of the compliance of Germany's migration policy with International Refugee and Migration Law, as it is crucial for the country's survivability and move forward throughout this phase of its history. The importance of the research lies in whether or not Germany's migration policy towards the Syrian Refugees in particular complies with its duties toward international law embodied in the treaties and conventions it has committed to.
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Text Sample:Chapter IV Migration to Germany and the Syrian Crisis in the EU:
German migration policy has evolved to encompass what it does in the present day due to a number of determining factors. This chapter will outline the context amid which the research question has developed and come to attention, through highlighting the history of migration to Germany in figures, the Syrian Crisis and refugee flows into Europe and Germany consequently, and the European Union Migration Policy under which Germany is bound, this section will go on to place the agreement between Turkey and the EU in context, as well as the current foundation upon which Germany's migration policy is built. This chapter will support the research question in ist endeavor to discover the extent to which the crisis has affected Germany's migration policy, as well as ist compliance with international law in the case of the Syrian refugees in particular.
Migration to Germany in Figures:
Statistics have shown that an increasing number of refugees headed to Germany as well as to other countries of the European Union after to the eruption of the Yugoslav Wars (1991-2001). Despite the fact that a mere five percent (5%) of applications for asylum were approved, and also in spite the fact that appeals took as long as years to be finally processed, a significant number of asylum seekers were in fact able to stay in Germany and benefit from financial and social aid from the German government.
Moreover, as of the year 2013, the approval rate of asylum applications was at an impressive thirty percent (30%), and 127,000 individuals applied for asylum within the German borders. In 2014, the number increased to around 202,834 individuals who sought asylum in Germany. The German government accepted even more asylum seekers in 2015 with more than 800,000 individuals applying for asylum, a number that has reached an estimated 1,000,000 as of the beginning of 2017.
Since 2014, an estimated 16.3 million
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immigrants were living in Germany, and in turn accounting for one in five people of the German population. Of those 16.3 million individuals, 8.2 million did not possess German citizenship. Immigrants flooded mostly from Turkey, Eastern Europe or Southern European countries. The bulk of new immigrants entering into Germany in 2014 were from recent EU member states such as Poland, Romania, Bulgaria and Croatia or from the Middle East and North African (MENA) region. Evidently, due to ongoing conflicts in the Middle East, individuals are consistently hoping to see asylum in the European Union and in Germany in particular - it being one of the most popular destinations in Europe. The overwhelming majority of immigrants are currently settled on a permanent and non-permanent basis in the old states of Germany, namely: Baden-Württemberg; Bavaria; Bremen; Hamburg; Hesse; Lower Saxony; North Rhine-Westphalia; Rhineland-Palatinate; Saarland and Schleswig-Holstein. In an unprecedented increase of 138% from 2013, over 276,000 individuals entered the EU illegally in 2014. Due to the fact that the numbers of asylum applications and illegal immigration to the EU and Germany in particular have risen greatly since 2013, the situation for them in EU countries and Germany in many cases is an overcrowded refugee camp until further notice.
On the 20th of March, 2015 the Federal Minister of Interior of Germany affirmed that the duration of the assessment of an asylum application, taking a minimum of five and a half months on average, is too lengthy. One of the main reasons for this delay in the application process is attributed to the obstacles in the identification of the refugees. Fingerprint scans are introduced, and individuals are checked in meticulous detail in order to identify their true country of origin. As Germany's decision to admit 800,000 refugees in 2015 poses a massive burden upon several German States, the Federal Minister of the Interior further affirmed that in the aim of s
On the 20th of March, 2015 the Federal Minister of Interior of Germany affirmed that the duration of the assessment of an asylum application, taking a minimum of five and a half months on average, is too lengthy. One of the main reasons for this delay in the application process is attributed to the obstacles in the identification of the refugees. Fingerprint scans are introduced, and individuals are checked in meticulous detail in order to identify their true country of origin. As Germany's decision to admit 800,000 refugees in 2015 poses a massive burden upon several German States, the Federal Minister of the Interior further affirmed that in the aim of s
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Autoren-Porträt von Jasmin Lilian Diab
Ms. Diab holds an M.A. in International Law from Notre Dame University Louaize in Lebanon. She works as a researcher, manager and consultant in the fields of International Relations, International Law, and Migration.
Bibliographische Angaben
- Autor: Jasmin Lilian Diab
- 2017, 140 Seiten, Maße: 15,5 x 22 cm, Kartoniert (TB), Englisch
- Verlag: Anchor Academic Publishing
- ISBN-10: 3960671512
- ISBN-13: 9783960671510
Sprache:
Englisch
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