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		<title>Words Don&#8217;t Come Easy: &#8220;Disembarkation Platform&#8221;</title>
		<link>https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/disembarkation-platforms/</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 30 Oct 2018 11:07:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Noah J. Gordon]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Berlin Policy Journal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[November/December 2018]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[EU Immigration Policy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Migration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Refugees]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Words Don't Come Easy]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/?p=7435</guid>
				<description><![CDATA[<p>When it comes to refugee and migration policy, the European Union has a knack for inventing pseudo-English terms. Itʼs highly unlikely that doublespeak will ... </p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/disembarkation-platforms/">Words Don&#8217;t Come Easy: &#8220;Disembarkation Platform&#8221;</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://berlinpolicyjournal.com">Berlin Policy Journal - Blog</a>.</p>
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								<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="p1"><strong><span class="s1">When it comes to refugee and migration policy, the European Union has a knack for inventing </span>pseudo-English terms. Itʼs highly unlikely <span class="s2">that doublespeak will provide a breakthrough.</span></strong></p>
<div id="attachment_7444" style="width: 1000px" class="wp-caption alignnone"><a href="https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Desembarcationcenter_ONLINE.jpg"><img aria-describedby="caption-attachment-7444" class="wp-image-7444 size-full" src="https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Desembarcationcenter_ONLINE.jpg" alt="" width="1000" height="563" srcset="https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Desembarcationcenter_ONLINE.jpg 1000w, https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Desembarcationcenter_ONLINE-300x169.jpg 300w, https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Desembarcationcenter_ONLINE-850x479.jpg 850w, https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Desembarcationcenter_ONLINE-257x144.jpg 257w, https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Desembarcationcenter_ONLINE-300x169@2x.jpg 600w, https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Desembarcationcenter_ONLINE-257x144@2x.jpg 514w" sizes="(max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px" /></a><p id="caption-attachment-7444" class="wp-caption-text">Artwork © Dominik Herrmann</p></div>
<p class="p1">When Europe&#8217;s heads of government staggered bleary-eyed out of a Council meeting on the morning of June 29th, it looked as if they had broken the migration policy deadlock. Angela Merkel had the result she needed to keep her government together and calm her sister party, the Bavarian CSU. The new Italian prime minister, Giuseppe Conte, was also pleased&#8211; he had gotten promises of support from the rest of Europe with the migrants landing on his country&#8217;s Mediterranean coastline, and Italy was now “no longer alone.” With the ostensible breakthrough emerged a new term: “regional disembarkation platforms.” But what exactly was Brussels&#8217; new baby?</p>
<p class="p3">The objective of these platforms, later called regional disembarkation “arrangements,” is to “provide quick and safe disembarkation on both sides of the Mediterranean of rescued people in line with international law, including the principle of non-refoulement, and a responsible post-disembarkation process.” According to various official EU documents, key elements of the concept are: having “clear rules for all,” support from the UN Refugee Agency, “partnerships on equal footing,” “no pull factors,” and “no detention, no camps.”</p>
<p class="p4"><b>Emphatically Not Camps</b></p>
<p class="p2">Got it? OK, there’s more detail to come. But it’s notable that the EU fact sheet does not contain a sentence that plainly states what the disembarkation platforms are. No subject and predicate linked by a copula, not even an “appear” or “will become.” But remember, they are emphatically not camps.</p>
<p class="p3">This, though, is not just an example of obfuscatory bureaucrat speak, of which the EU is a master in English, run as it is by highly educated officials who often speak excellent English as a second or third or fourth language, peppering their statements with words like “informations” and “feedbacks” that are foreign to a native. The problem is that it’s very difficult to be clear about a concept that must be all things to all people.</p>
<p class="p3">Some parts about disembarkation platforms are somewhat clear. The core idea is to set up safe centers for processing asylum claims outside of EU borders, probably in safe countries in North Africa. This would “eliminate the incentive to embark on perilous journeys” across the sea in order to have the right to file an asylum claim. It would also help stop people smugglers, a noble goal. If a migrant at sea is rescued by a third-country vessel or by an EU vessel in international waters, he or she could be brought to one of the platforms. Those people not entitled to international protection should “be returned,” while those in need of protection could be resettled, though not all of them would get to go to Europe. In order to entice African countries to sign up, the EU will offer money, training, administrative support, and legal resettlement places.<span class="Apple-converted-space">   </span></p>
<p class="p4"><b>Kurz’ Idea</b></p>
<p class="p2">This is not a new concept. European leaders have long floated similar plans. At the restrictive end of the spectrum, Sebastian Kurz of Austria has pushed for “safe zones” in refugees’ countries of origin, which the EU would support “militarily.” Indeed, the 2016 EU agreement with Turkey is based on the principle of a third country processing migrants and preventing so-called irregular migration in exchange for EU aid and concessions. All such ideas are part of the EU’s push to externalize the migration problem by getting other countries to take more responsibility for people crossing their borders, which also defuses the issue politically and minimizes the EU’s legal responsibility by reducing contact with migrants.</p>
<p class="p3">Europe’s partners, though, quickly made clear how difficult it would be to implement “disembarkation platforms.” The UN Refugee Agency reportedly wrote a confidential letter insisting that any centers in third countries be “safe and dignified,” a tall order in, for example, key transit country Libya given the deplorable conditions and slave markets there. African heads of state responded by agreeing to reject Europe’s “easy, counterproductive solution,” as Morocco described it. According to recent reports, there is still no African country prepared to operate a platform.<span class="Apple-converted-space">  </span>No government is eager to be fully responsible for the centers, or risk having rejected asylum-seekers disappear into its territory.</p>
<p class="p3">Migration experts agreed that the idea was fanciful. Catherine Woollard of the European Council on Refugees and Exiles accused the EU of living in “externalization fantasyland,” of relying on countries taking back their citizens when they are unwilling or unable to do so. To a developing country, remittances from citizens working in Europe are often more valuable than extra foreign aid; and sometimes these countries are wary of reaccepting emigrants for whom they couldn’t provide jobs or services in the first place.</p>
<p class="p4"><b>Too Few Legal Ways</b></p>
<p class="p2">Europe also offers too few legal resettlement places to really discourage illegal migration, as Elizabeth Collett and Susan Fratzke of the Migration Policy Institute point out. In March 2018, the UN had to temporarily suspend a program whereby refugees were flown from Libya to Niger for processing because the EU had only resettled a fraction of the already small number promised. The EU’s first scheme to force member states to take in refugees from Italy and Greece already collapsed when the Visegrad countries revolted. And cooperation has hardly improved since the June summit: in August, the Italian government refused for six days to allow a boat of Eritrean migrants to disembark in Sicily until Ireland finally agreed to take some in.</p>
<p class="p3">It’s easy to snipe from the sidelines. Illegal migration to Europe is an intractable problem that is only likely to get bigger, at least from the perspective of Europe’s politicians. And the announcement from Brussels that the EU had agreed on a migration solution was certainly a boon to Merkel and Conte. Just don’t expect “disembarkation platforms” to be the breakthrough for European migration policy, or the next new name for refugee centers to be much more than window dressing. Unless North Africa has a change of heart, the only relevant platforms will be the piers where people get off boats.<span class="Apple-converted-space"><br />
</span></p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/disembarkation-platforms/">Words Don&#8217;t Come Easy: &#8220;Disembarkation Platform&#8221;</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://berlinpolicyjournal.com">Berlin Policy Journal - Blog</a>.</p>
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		<title>Reason Before Fear</title>
		<link>https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/reason-before-fear/</link>
				<pubDate>Wed, 06 Jul 2016 11:28:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Roderick Parkes]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Berlin Policy Journal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[July/August 2016]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[EU Immigration Policy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Immigration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Refugee Crisis]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://berlinpolicyjournal.com/?p=3726</guid>
				<description><![CDATA[<p>There is no need to apologizze for the EU's migration policy, but there's still room for improvement.</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/reason-before-fear/">Reason Before Fear</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://berlinpolicyjournal.com">Berlin Policy Journal - Blog</a>.</p>
]]></description>
								<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="e5992e27-79a3-a515-c58b-c64ed4f9c475" class="story story_body">
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text_Anfang_Initial"><strong>European migration policy has been roundly criticized lately  for being too illiberal. While this is unfair, there is room for improve- ment in the EUʼs dealing with refugees and migrants.</strong></p>
<div id="attachment_3774" style="width: 1000px" class="wp-caption alignnone"><a href="http://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/BPJ_04-2016_Parkes_cut.jpg" rel="attachment wp-att-3774"><img aria-describedby="caption-attachment-3774" class="wp-image-3774 size-full" src="http://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/BPJ_04-2016_Parkes_cut.jpg" alt="BPJ_04-2016_Parkes_cut" width="1000" height="563" srcset="https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/BPJ_04-2016_Parkes_cut.jpg 1000w, https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/BPJ_04-2016_Parkes_cut-300x169.jpg 300w, https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/BPJ_04-2016_Parkes_cut-768x432.jpg 768w, https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/BPJ_04-2016_Parkes_cut-850x479.jpg 850w, https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/BPJ_04-2016_Parkes_cut-257x144.jpg 257w, https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/BPJ_04-2016_Parkes_cut-300x169@2x.jpg 600w, https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/IP/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/BPJ_04-2016_Parkes_cut-257x144@2x.jpg 514w" sizes="(max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px" /></a><p id="caption-attachment-3774" class="wp-caption-text">© picture alliance/empics/Steve Parsons</p></div>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text_Anfang_Initial"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">This March, the EU agreed to a deal with Turkey under which Ankara takes back refugees from the Greek islands and better regulates their onward movement to Europe. Commentators wrote it off as pointless, saying Syrians, Iraqis, and Afghans would simply be pushed to a far more dangerous path to the EU via Libya. There has indeed been a rise in the numbers coming through Libya, but the reality is more complex. Syrians, Iraqis, and Afghans are just a trace element there, while the biggest numbers come from across Africa.</span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">The sheer range of nationalities passing though Libya is just the latest sign that something systemic is wrong in the world. Only half of all asylum seekers to the EU last year came from Syria, Iraq, or Afghanistan. Nigeria was the number one source country for Italy; Sudan for France; Eritrea for the UK; and Russia for Poland. One analyst counted more than a hundred nationalities registered in Lesbos last year. </span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">This exodus constitutes a souring of globalization and poses a challenge to the liberal Western order. In 1991, when barriers and buffers collapsed, mass migration threatened to overwhelm fragile state-building processes from Eastern Europe to Africa. Western states took a gamble, using trade and capital flows to give people reasons to stay home. This promise of equitable global development has now seemingly run its course.</span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">The West’s attempt to create a massive crossborder economy was always going to be hard to combine with national state-building. Many liberals were naive to believe that international trade and investment would automatically spread democracy and its institutions. With their plans now in tatters, it is time for a rethink on European migration policy.</span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Zwischenueberschrift"><strong><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">The Need to Intervene</span></strong></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text_ohneEinzug"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">In the refugee debate, Europe’s voters and politicians are putting their fears before reason. In the case of liberals, they see all border measures as unjust and EU overseas interventions as “burden-shifting.” Europe as “the lone beacon of liberalism” is just the other side of the coin of “Fortress Europe.” Both ideas reflect pessimism about the EU’s ability to positively influence the chaos beyond its borders.</span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">What drives liberals to test the EU’s moral credentials by making it stand as a beacon in a collapsing international order? It comes down to a reluctance to tackle the root causes of migration: the West has a poor recent track record of state-building, and interventions in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya seem nothing short of hubris in hindsight. These interventions have certainly contributed to the refugee crisis. </span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">Policies to address the causes of irregular migration – interventions, trade, aid – may have been flawed and messy, but they were also necessary. Moreover, the EU’s approach of managing migration from its neighbors was essentially constructive. The EU has tried to build up neighboring countries and regions, then gradually reduce barriers with them. That is what the EU was doing when it enlarged eastwards or removed visa restrictions for the Western Balkans. </span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Zwischenueberschrift"><strong><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">Starting from the Bottom Up</span></strong></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text_ohneEinzug"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">Happily, the overseas interventions required to address migration do not involve classic state-building. Certainly saving Libya or Syria feature on the EU’s agenda. But what is required to manage migration is an effort at the micro-level. Take the people-smuggling networks across the EU’s neighborhood. We talk about “king pins” and “crime bosses.” But the networks are in fact mostly run by individuals making a quick buck. If only it were a case of eliminating “Mr. Big.” </span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">Syrians and Afghans often speak highly of the people who smuggle them across borders – except when being interviewed by European border guards. This is because the smuggling networks are increasingly controlled from diaspora groups in the EU and family members outside. By contrast, the refugees speak badly of the Istanbul taxi drivers who know the safe houses and are notorious for overcharging Syrians. </span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">Migrants are using the networks designed to escape development failures. Syrians flee in no small part because of poor urbanization. They coordinate themselves via smartphone. If they move on from Turkey, it is in search of education for their children. As for those arriving in the EU, sixty percent rely on classic travel agents and just two percent on the EU’s attempts to engage on social media. </span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">Why are we not looking for bottom-up solutions across the Middle East? Aid workers on the front line in northern Syria complain that large humanitarian organizations are “withdrawing from the world.” Big organizations, says one aid worker, subcontract the spadework to smaller ones like his, meaning he is the one teaching the law of war in rebel-held zones or deciding whether to help refugees cross borders. As they divorce themselves from reality, the big organizations take the moral high ground in Brussels and Berlin, but they can no longer convey information from the ground up. </span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Zwischenueberschrift"><strong><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">Four Observations</span></strong></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text_ohneEinzug"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">If liberals are to rediscover their sense of reality, they may well have to confront some unpalatable political ideas. When Bob Smith and Bob Wilson created their famous 12-step plan to sobriety, they were drawing from their own experience as reformed alcoholics. Consider what follows as talking points of a political rehabilitation drawn from bitter experience.</span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">Europe must externalize the solution. Today, just as in the 1990s, the main locus of the refugee crisis is beyond the EU’s borders. The real global crisis is not one of mobility but immobility: the vast majority of people displaced by violence are internally displaced, unable to cross borders. The majority of those who do leave their country are sitting close to the border. The UK Government Science Office acknowledged this predicament in 2011 when trying to predict numbers of climate refugees: the real problem, it came to realize, would not be mass migration but “trapped populations.” </span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">Refugees are not helpless. OECD data suggest that the people who flee to Europe are often resilient, educated, and trained. But as they enter the EU, they are suddenly made to fit the European conception of what a refugee ought to be. Why do European societies require asylum seekers to be helpless? Today, migrants daily prove the reverse is true: those who move are often safest, have the best job opportunities, and can “vote with their feet.” A liberal Europe that is unable to make a sedentary lifestyle sustainable finds itself trying to make the mobile helpless.</span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">Let’s be more ambitious. Many cling to the belief that all EU migration policy is illiberal, but they cannot offer a clear alternative to it. That is not to deny that some reform proposals do mark a clear liberal alternative – for example giving Frontex a search-and-rescue mandate or creating so-called Nansen passports for people to come to Europe to make a claim for refuge. When these ideas fail to gain traction, their supporters grumble it is because they are too ambitious. The reverse is true: Europe’s politicians have lost a whole liberal toolbox for dealing with migration, one which allowed them to affect the root causes abroad. As a result, the EU is left at the mercy of external forces.</span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">Liberals are fueling populism. Liberals, like populists, are using refugees as metaphors in an emotional debate of their own about the need for a progressive Europe. When liberals cite Europe’s “demographic crisis” as grounds to welcome refugees, they are siding with heavily globalized urban hubs and adopting arguments that reduce people to mere economic or breeding units. This is exactly what populists fear.</span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Zwischenueberschrift"><strong><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">Lessons of History</span></strong></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text_ohneEinzug"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">In the early 1990s, the EU experienced the last major shift in global power. At the time, there were fears of a massive, permanent flow of migration. Populists called on the EU to tear up its plans for a passport-free travel area (“Schengen”) and roll back refugee law. Despite the panic, the flows never materialized. </span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">The historical lesson is not that such fears are always unfounded. Rather, it showed how necessary emergency border controls were to reestablish the rule of law and liberal institutions and to usher in a shift in liberal policy. </span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">Those emergency restrictions have been the first priority in this crisis, too. But liberals must see that just as in 1991, European migration policy is a vacuum waiting to be filled – and that they have the scope to propose ambitious long-term reforms. After all, the old European policy of trade liberalization and state-building rested on the pledge that goods, capital, jobs, and democracy would come to the developing world, so people there did not have to move in search of them. It has not worked out that way, and people are on the move. That means the world needs new ways of matching up people and things across borders. Imagine the globalization of the sharing economy! </span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">Away from the emotive debates about the Turkey deal, EU policy is quietly cohering around four principles: helping displaced people help themselves; giving people opportunities as close to home as possible; engaging with the more progressive of the West’s “rivals</span><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">”</span><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">; and, creating genuine political partnerships with poorer states. </span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><span class="char char_$ID/[No_character_style]">There is plenty of potential there for a truly liberal approach.<br />
</span></p>
<p class="para para_BPJ_Text"><em>NB. The author&#8217;s recent study &#8220;People on the Move. The New Global (Dis)Order&#8221; can be found <a href="http://www.iss.europa.eu/uploads/media/Chaillot_Paper_138.pdf">here</a>.</em></p>
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<p style="text-align: center;"><strong>Read more in the Berlin Policy Journal App – July/August 2016 issue.</strong></p>
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<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://berlinpolicyjournal.com/reason-before-fear/">Reason Before Fear</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://berlinpolicyjournal.com">Berlin Policy Journal - Blog</a>.</p>
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