Posted: 

New article by Lilian Tsourdi explores solidarity in administration of European asylum system

A new article by Lilian Tsourdi explores solidarity in the administrative governance of the Common European Asylum System (CEAS).

Policymakers conceptualize the CEAS as a ‘common area of protection and solidarity’. And yet, the absence of solidarity and fair-sharing in the administrative governance of the policy is glaringly salient.

Against this backdrop, this article explores Article 80 TFEU, establishing the principle of ‘solidarity and fair-sharing of responsibility’. This analysis reveals it to be a principle that is structural to the EU asylum policy, dictates a certain ‘quality’ in the co-operation of the different actors, and affects the goal of the policy.

To do this, after outlining the initial implementation design of the asylum policy, the article examine ‘shifts’ in its administration modes, focusing on developments in responsibility-assignation, practical cooperation and EU funding.

The analysis covers developments prompted by the 2015 ‘refugee crisis’, such as the emergency intra-EU relocation schemes, the emergence of new funding lines and the enhancement in the operational role of EU agencies.

The article argues that, despite the rhetoric surrounding the solidarity principle, rather than being structurally embedded in the system’s administration modes, it remains emergency-driven. In this sense, the implementation design fails both to attain ‘fair sharing’, as well as to respond to what are essentially structural, rather than exceptional needs.

Evangelia (Lilian) Tsourdi (2017) 'Solidarity at work? The prevalence of emergency-driven solidarity in the administrative governance of the Common European Asylum System', Maastricht Journal of European and Comparative Law, DOI: 10.1177/1023263X17742801