|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
Principally, this book comprises a conceptual analysis of the
illegality of a third-country national's stay by examining the
boundaries of the overarching concept of illegality at the EU
level. Having found that the holistic conceptualisation of
illegality, constructed through a combination of sources (both EU
and national law) falls short of adequacy, the book moves on to
consider situations that fall outside the traditional binary of
legal and illegal under EU law. The cases of unlawfully staying EU
citizens and of non-removable illegally staying third-country
nationals are examples of groups of migrants who are categorised as
atypical. By looking at these two examples the book reveals not
only the fragmentation of legal statuses in EU migration law but
also the more general ill-fitting and unsatisfactory categorisation
of migrants. The potential conflation of illegality with
criminality as a result of the way EU databases regulate the legal
regime of illegality of a migrant's stay is the first trend
identified by the book. Subsequently, the book considers the
functions of accessing legality (both instrumental and corrective).
In doing so it draws out another trend evident in the EU illegality
regime: a two-tier regime which discriminates on the basis of
wealth and the instrumentalisation of access to legality by Member
States for mostly their own purposes. Finally, the book proposes a
corrective rationale for the regulation of illegality through
access to legality and provides a number of normative suggestions
as a way of remedying current deficiencies that arise out of the
present supranational framing of illegality.
Principally, this book comprises a conceptual analysis of the
illegality of a third-country national's stay by examining the
boundaries of the overarching concept of illegality at the EU
level. Having found that the holistic conceptualisation of
illegality, constructed through a combination of sources (both EU
and national law) falls short of adequacy, the book moves on to
consider situations that fall outside the traditional binary of
legal and illegal under EU law. The cases of unlawfully staying EU
citizens and of non-removable illegally staying third-country
nationals are examples of groups of migrants who are categorised as
atypical. By looking at these two examples the book reveals not
only the fragmentation of legal statuses in EU migration law but
also the more general ill-fitting and unsatisfactory categorisation
of migrants. The potential conflation of illegality with
criminality as a result of the way EU databases regulate the legal
regime of illegality of a migrant's stay is the first trend
identified by the book. Subsequently, the book considers the
functions of accessing legality (both instrumental and corrective).
In doing so it draws out another trend evident in the EU illegality
regime: a two-tier regime which discriminates on the basis of
wealth and the instrumentalisation of access to legality by Member
States for mostly their own purposes. Finally, the book proposes a
corrective rationale for the regulation of illegality through
access to legality and provides a number of normative suggestions
as a way of remedying current deficiencies that arise out of the
present supranational framing of illegality.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Higher
Michael Buble
CD
(1)
R482
Discovery Miles 4 820
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.