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emigration. "National refugees" for example, who are taken in by a state in which they have
family origins, do not fall into this category (eg French from Algeria, Poles from the territories
allocated to the Soviet Union). Groups forcibly displaced within a state (eg deported ethnic
minorities) enjoy hardly any protection from international law today. The United Nations is now
working hard to broaden and adapt refugee law.
Human rights and migration
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) contains three
articles applicable to
migration problems:
- Article 13: "(2) Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to
his country". There is no mention, though, of a right to enter another country. Only international
agreements (cf the Schengen Agreement) can provide a basis for the right of the citizens
concerned to enter and stay in a country.
- Article 14: "(1) Everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy in other countries asylum from
persecution". The article's second paragraph restricts this right to political persecution.
Asylum-
seekers not claiming political persecution - and these constitute a large part of the migratory
movements of the last third of the 20th century - are not granted such a right. One major
shortcoming is that a right or entitlement to asylum does not yet exist. Not even the 1951
Geneva Convention on Refugees enshrines an individual right to asylum, although it does
prohibit the expulsion, deportation or return of persecuted individuals to a state in which their life
or freedom would be threatened.
- Article 15: "(1) Everyone has the right to a nationality. (2) No one shall be arbitrarily deprived
of his nationality nor denied the right to change his nationality". This counters the problem of
statelessness; however, there is no associated right of naturalisation.
Flight and asylum and freedom of movement are also addressed by the European Convention
on Human Rights. All Council of Europe member states must ratify the Convention, though not
necessarily the additional protocols.
In the event of violations, application may be made to the
European Court of Human Rights.
Expulsion
Expulsion is defined as any forcible displacement, induced by threat or use of violence or other
coercive means, of individuals or groups from their ancestral areas of settlement to unfamiliar
territory. Once a solution for mixed ethnic areas had emerged in the first half of the 20th century
in resettlement and option treaties (cf the Treaty of Lausanne, which provided for the
resettlement of Greeks and Turks), thoughts turned towards a ban on expulsion following the
Second World War and, more recently, the civil wars and expulsions
effected in the former
Yugoslavia. Despite a multitude of efforts, there is still no formal ban on expulsion, although it
may be derived from international law concerning war. Article 49 of the IVth Geneva
Convention of 1949 prohibits transfers and deportations of civilian persons from occupied
territory and of a country's own civilian population to an occupied area. It is true that
reservations have limited the impact of the Convention to date. In 1977 the Convention was
supplemented by two additional
protocols, prohibiting expulsion on racist grounds.
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Other significant documents are as follows:
- International Covenant on civil and political rights (1966): Article 12 (liberty of movement within
one's country and the right to enter one's own country), Article 27 (protection of minorities)
- UN Resolution (1971) prohibiting measures forcing people to leave their homeland
- 4th additional protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights: Article 4 (prohibition of
collective expulsion of aliens)
- Council of Europe Framework Convention for the protection of national minorities.
Despite all these promising initiatives, the problem has not yet been satisfactorily resolved, one
of the reasons being that those responsible for enforcing international law have only half-
heartedly fulfilled their role. Only recently have there been signs of change, with abusive
expulsions being punished, for example (Tribunal proceedings
concerning Rwanda and
Yugoslavia).
Migration with the EU area
Within the EU area there are no restrictions on the freedom of movement of EU citizens. Under
the Treaty of Amsterdam immigration and asylum policy was transferred from the 3rd pillar of
the European Union to the European Community ("communitarisation") and given extensive
law-making competence (see Article 61ff of the Treaty establishing the European Economic
Community). The integration of the "Schengen Acquis" (
inter alia
the Schengen Agreement and
the 1990 Schengen Implementation Convention) was of tremendous significance for
immigration policy, and the content of the 1990 Dublin Agreement
is important as regards
asylum policy.
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