1. Introduction: EU Pre-border Controls and Protection Seeker Flows -- Part I. The EU System of Pre-Border Control and its Implications for Access to International Protection in Europe -- 2. Chronology and Conceptualisation of 'Integrated Border Management': The 'Embodied Border' Paradigm -- 3. The Schengen Borders Code: Securitised Admission Criteria as the Centrepiece of 'Integrated Border Management' -- Instilling Ambiguity -- 4. Common Visa Policy: Bordering from Abroad -- Applying Admission Criteria before Departure -- 5. Carrier Sanctions and ILOs : Anticipated Enforcement of Visa Requirements through 'Imperfect Delegation' -- Diverting Flows, Entrenching Unsafety -- 6. Frontex: Joint Maritime Interdiction of Undifferentiated Flows -- Operationalising 'Pre-emptive Controls' -- Part II. The Rights of Protection Seekers under EU Law and their Implications for Pre-Border Controls -- 7. The Fundamental Rights Acquis: An 'Integrated Approach' to Interpretation -- The 'Aggregate Standards' Model -- 8. EU Non-Refoulement: (The Irrelevance of) Territory and Pre-Border Controls -- 9. The Right to Asylum: An Individual Entitlement to (Access) International Protection -- 10. Remedies and Procedural Guarantees (and the Unavoidability of Access to Territory)Conclusions: Taking EU Refugee Rights Seriously
Summary
The timely subject matter of this work focuses on the interface between extraterritorial border surveillance and migration control by EU member states, and the rights that asylum seekers acquire from EU law. In particular Moreno-Lax concentrates on the relationship between the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights and border control measures
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index
Audience
Specialized
Notes
Online resource; title from home page (viewed on September 15, 2017)