Publications

Moving on: How easing mobility restrictions within Europe can help forced migrants rebuild their lives (TRAFIG Policy Brief No. 6)

Release Date

2022

Language

Topics


Free movement within the Schengen area is a cornerstone of European integration – and indeed an essential part of the European way of life. However, this freedom of movement is limited for forcibly displaced people residing within the European Union (EU). European asylum systems are designed to suppress mobility, which actually prevents many asylum seekers from finding a ‘durable solution’. In contrast, enabling legal mobility within and across EU countries, when paired with access to labour markets and ensuring the right to family life, can open new opportunities for forced migrants to settle into receiving communities and truly rebuild their lives. Based on TRAFIG research in Greece and Italy (which is presented in TRAFIG working paper no. 9 ), this policy brief illustrates why mobility is important for displaced people and how it is being hampered by policies and practices. It then suggests strategic ways that policymakers can tap into the potential of mobility to provide additional solutions to protracted displacement in Europe.
You can download the policy brief here

Cite as

@misc{KatsiaficasPastoreHatziprokopiou2022, author = "Caitlin Katsiaficas and Ferruccio Pastore and Panos Hatziprokopiou and Benjamin Etzold and Albert Kraler", title = "Moving on: How easing mobility restrictions within Europe can help forced migrants rebuild their lives (TRAFIG Policy Brief No. 6)", latexTitle = "Moving on: How easing mobility restrictions within Europe can help forced migrants rebuild their lives (TRAFIG Policy Brief No. 6)", publisher = "BICC", institution = "BICC", type = "Other publications", year = "2022", address = "Bonn", }

Document-Type

Other publications

Publisher

BICC

Place

Bonn