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"This timely book assesses national and supranational bilateral approaches to dealing with the rising tide of migration into the European Union via the Mediterranean Sea. International law and EU migration law specialists critically assess the legal tools adopted to engage with the 'refugee crisis'. While the EU works to develop a unified approach to Mediterranean transit and origin countries, the authors argue that a crucial role should be accorded to individual states in finding a solution to this complex and sensitive situation."
Emigration and immigration law --- Immigrants --- International and municipal law --- EMIGRATION AND IMMIGRATION LAW--EU --- EMIGRATION AND IMMIGRATION LAW -MEDITERRANEAN REGION --- MEDITERRANEAN REGION--EMIGRATION AND IMMIGRATION --- EU--EMIGRATION AND IMMIGRATION --- Emigration and immigration law - European Union countries --- Emigration and immigration law - Mediterranean Region --- Immigrants - Mediterranean Region --- Immigrants - European Union countries --- International and municipal law - European Union countries
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This book is dedicated to a topic which has for a long time lacked the attention it deserves within the academic world. It intends to address in a coherent and comprehensive manner the problem of the environmental rights of the child, which are not identical to the ones of adults whose environmental rights have been appraised from a general point of view. In the absence of any international law instrument explicitly granting a child the right to a clean environment, drawing on an extensive and original analysis of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and the practice of its monitoring body, this book undertakes an assessment of the extent to which these challenges may be overcome through a greater engagement between international law on the rights of the child and international environmental law. The result is the first comprehensive study on the manner in which these two mutually reinforcing legal regimes can interact to strengthen the protection of children’s environmental human rights at stake in the increased strategic environmental and climate litigations at both the national and international level. The book is recommended reading for, amongst others, policy makers, international environmental lawyers and human rights lawyers and practitioners. Additionally, lecturers, students and researchers from a range of disciplines will also gain from seeing how new legal scholarship and intertwined branches of international law contribute to the continual development of the living rights of the human rights conventions. Francesca Ippolito is Associate Professor of International Law in the Department of Political and Social Science of the University of Cagliari, Italy. She holds the Jean Monnet Chair on European Climate of Change - REACT for 2021-2024. .
European law --- International law --- Human rights --- Public law. Constitutional law --- Environmental law --- Meteorology. Climatology --- mensenrechten --- Europees recht --- klimatologie --- internationaal recht --- publiek recht --- Europe --- Human rights. --- Environmental law, International. --- International law. --- Law --- Climatology. --- Human Rights. --- International Environmental Law. --- Public International Law. --- European Law. --- Climate Sciences. --- Europe.
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Mediterranean states have developed various cooperation mechanisms in order to cope with the issues that arise from migration. This book critically analyses how institutional actors act and interact on the international scene in the control and management of migration in the Mediterranean. It highlights how, even though the involvement of 'universal' international organisations guarantees a certain balance in setting the goals of cooperation mechanisms and buttresses a certain coherence of the actions, the protection of migrants' fundamental rights is still an objective as opposed to a reality, and security imperatives and trends still prevail in the aftermath of the 2011 Arab Spring.
Emigration and immigration law --- Boat people --- Asylum, Right of --- Illegal aliens --- Aliens --- Aliens, Illegal --- Illegal immigrants --- Illegal immigration --- Undocumented aliens --- Alien detention centers --- Human smuggling --- Right of asylum --- Sanctuary (Law) --- Refugees --- Defection --- Deportation --- Extradition --- Balseros --- Rafters (People) --- Political refugees --- Emigration and immigration --- Immigrants --- Immigration law --- Law, Emigration --- Law, Immigration --- International travel regulations --- Legal status, laws, etc. --- Law and legislation --- Children of illegal aliens --- Illegal alien children --- Irregular migration --- Unauthorized immigration --- Undocumented immigration --- Women illegal aliens --- Noncitizen detention centers --- Noncitizens --- Enemy aliens --- Expatriates --- Foreign population --- Foreign residents --- Foreigners --- Non-citizens --- Resident aliens --- Unauthorized immigrants --- Undocumented immigrants --- Unnaturalized foreign residents --- Persons --- Undocumented Immigrants --- Unauthorized Immigrants --- Undocumented Aliens --- Undocumented Workers --- Alien, Undocumented --- Aliens, Undocumented --- Immigrant, Unauthorized --- Immigrant, Undocumented --- Immigrants, Unauthorized --- Immigrants, Undocumented --- Unauthorized Immigrant --- Undocumented Alien --- Undocumented Immigrant --- Undocumented Worker --- Worker, Undocumented --- Workers, Undocumented --- Illegal immigration.
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Children (International law). --- Children of migrant laborers --- Children of migrant laborers --- Children --- Children's rights --- Children's rights. --- Refugee children --- Refugee children --- Legal status, laws, etc --- Legal status, laws, etc. --- Legal status, laws, etc --- Legal status, laws, etc --- Legal status, laws, etc.
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Sociology of minorities --- Human rights --- International private law --- European Union --- Civil rights --- Human rights - Europe --- Civil rights - Europe
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The concept of vulnerability has not been unequivocally interpreted either in regional or in universal international legal instruments. This book analyses the work of the EU and the Council of Europe in ascertaining a clear framework or a set of criteria suitable to determine those who should be considered vulnerable and disadvantaged. It also explores the measures required to protect their human rights. Key questions can be answered by analysing the different methods used to determine the levels of protection offered by the two European systems. These questions include whether the Convention and the case law of the Strasbourg Court, the monitoring mechanisms of the Council of Europe, EU law and the case law of the European Court of Justice enhance the protection of vulnerable groups and expand the protection of their rights, or, alternatively, whether they are mainly used to fill in relatively minor gaps or occasional lapses in national rights guarantees. The analysis also shows the extent to which these two European systems provide analogous, or indeed divergent, standards and how any such divergence might be problematic in light of the EU accession to the European Convention on Human Rights
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