ERN+ Webinar Series on Complementary Pathways of Refugee Admission in Europe

Similar documents
The European Resettlement Network. Complementary Pathways of Admission to Europe for Refugees

Refugees access to international protection: 16 recommendations to develop legal and safe pathways

EC/68/SC/CRP.14. Update on resettlement. Executive Committee of the High Commissioner s Programme. Standing Committee 69 th meeting.

High-level meeting on global responsibility sharing through pathways for admission of Syrian refugees. Geneva, 30 March 2016.

COUNTRY CHAPTER GER GERMANY BY THE GOVERNMENT OF GERMANY

TOWARDS A PRIVATE SPONSORSHIP MODEL IN FRANCE

Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs WORKING DOCUMENT

Germany as a Country of Admission for Syrian Refugees

***I DRAFT REPORT. EN United in diversity EN. European Parliament 2016/0225(COD)

Council of the European Union Brussels, 27 April 2016 (OR. en)

COUNTRY CHAPTER GER GERMANY BY THE GOVERNMENT OF GERMANY

Resettlement and Humanitarian Admission Programmes in Europe what works?

Proposal for a COUNCIL DECISION

ANNEX. to the. Commission Implementing Decision

Canada s Private Sponsorship of Refugees Program. Peter Christensen Immigration Program Manager Embassy of Canada, Tokyo

Council of the European Union Brussels, 5 April 2016 (OR. en)

BACKGROUND PAPER FROM UNHCR: EU RESETTLEMENT

Your Excellencies and Ladies and Gentlemen,

Submission by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees

COUNTRY OPERATIONS PLAN. Country: Canada

***I REPORT. EN United in diversity EN. European Parliament A8-0316/

A New Beginning Refugee Integration in Europe

SAFE PATHWAYS FOR REFUGEES

Requested by GR EMN NCP on 2 nd September Compilation produced on 14 th November 2015

UNHCR s recommendations for the Romanian Presidency of the Council of the EU

MUNICIPALITY OF LIVADIA: The Housing Programme ESTIA the experience of Livadia

International Organization for Migration Review of the National Referral Mechanism Written Evidence Submission to the Review Team September 2014

ANNEX ANNEX. to the COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING DECISION

EU-Turkey Agreement. 18. March 2016 in effect since 20. March 2016

Country Chapters - UNHCR Resettlement Handbook COUNTRY CHAPTER URU URUGUAY BY THE GOVERNMENT OF. August 2011, revised July 2016 Uruguay Page 1

COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE EUROPEAN COUNCIL AND THE COUNCIL

PATHWAYS OF ADMISSION TO PROTECTION AND SOLUTIONS FOR REFUGEES

RESETTLING 10 PERCENT OF SYRIAN REFUGEES

The document is approved in principle. Formal adoption will follow as soon as all language versions are available.

COUNTRY CHAPTER CZE THE CZECH REPUBLIC BY THE GOVERNMENT OF THE CZECH

COUNTRY OPERATIONS PLAN. Country: Arab Republic of Egypt

Refugee and Migrant Children in Europe

REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE EUROPEAN COUNCIL AND THE COUNCIL. Fifteenth report on relocation and resettlement

On the move in the world and in Europe

Iraqi Refugee Processing Fact Sheet

Moving forward on asylum in the EU:

UK VISAS & IMMIGRATION ASYLUM CASEWORK DIRECTORATE ASYLUM DEVELOPMENTS AND TRAINING IN THE UK

ICE ICELAND BY THE GOVERNMENT OF ICELAND

COUNTRY CHAPTER CAN CANADA BY THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA

New Directions for Refugee Resettlement. Naomi Alboim Pathways to Prosperity December 2016

Guidance: Implementation of section 67 of the Immigration Act 2016 in France. Version 2.0

Reforming the Common European Asylum System in a spirit of humanity and solidarity

Summary of IOM Statistics

NATIONAL STRATEGIES AND POLICIES UK & NORTHERN IRELAND

An overview of irregular migration trends in Europe

Overview of UNHCR s operations in the Americas

European Refugee Fund Community actions - List of grants awarded

IOM s COMPREHENSIVE APPROACH TO COUNTER MIGRANT SMUGGLING

IOM s COMPREHENSIVE APPROACH TO COUNTER MIGRANT SMUGGLING

Third Country Refugee Resettlement Information Refugees from Bhutan living in Nepal

Submission to Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) regarding the 2017 Immigration Levels, Settlement and Integration Roundtables

83% of Syrian refugees in Jordan live in urban areas and 17% live in three refugee camps. 48% of refugees are children, and 4% are elderly people.

Refugee Sponsorship. Information Package (Updated June 2016) Adapted from ISANS Refugee Sponsorship Info Package by Stephen Law

UN Summit on Refugees and Migrants discussions, commitments and follow up

Refugee and Migrant Children in Europe Accompanied, Unaccompanied and Separated

French resettlement policy

EMN Ireland conference summary. Migrant family reunification: policy and practice

Introduction to the Refugee Context and Higher Education Programmes Supporting Refugees in Germany

EUROPEAN RESETTLEMENT NETWORK

Annual Tripartite Consultations on Resettlement June Background Note for the Agenda Item: FAMILY REUNIFICATION

Inform on migrants movements through the Mediterranean

A UNHCR s perspective

iii I. About IOM The IOM Office in Romania III. Migration trends in Romania IV. IOM interventions in Romania V. Public events VI.

The Identification of Refugees in Need of Resettlement

National Action Plan CRRF Ministry of Interior

Opportunities to change the residence title and the purpose of stay in Germany

Upcoming Events The ERN+ Webinar Series on complementary pathways of admission

The Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea with a special focus on the Yemen situation. IOM and UNHCR Proposals for Strategic Action October 2015

UNHCR Note 14 th Coordination meeting on International Migration, New York February 2016

2009 NGOS AND RESETTLEMENT ADVOCACY

Migrant terms and definitions. International Organisation of Migration Group and Sub-Group Terms. IOM Migrant groups term 1

The Dublin family reunification procedure from Greece to Germany

ANNEX. to the. Commission Implementing Decision

Rising to the challenge: world leaders need to urgently adopt solutions for refugees and migrants beyond the UN Summit

Jordan partnership paper Conference document

The Syrian Refugee Crisis: A Comparison of Responses by Germany, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the United States

Austrian Red Cross. Migration & Integration 2013 Projects and Challenges. Diana Karabinova, Karin Pointner Share Study Visit 4-5 July Sheffield, UK

The Dublin system in the first half of 2018 Key figures from selected European countries

PROPOSED PILOT OF A PRIVATE/COMMUNITY REFUGEE SPONSORSHIP PROGRAM Discussion Paper

Towards a global compact on refugees

SUBMISSION ON THE MANAGING AUSTRALIA S MIGRANT INTAKE DISCUSSION PAPER

Migration Network for Asylum seekers and Refugees in Europe and Turkey

EMERGING RESETTLEMENT COUNTRIES JOINT SUPPORT MECHANISM (ERCM)

EU Resettlement Skills Share Day Johannes van der Klaauw Senior Resettlement Coordinator UNHCR Division of International Protection

EMHRN Position on Refugees from Syria June 2014

Expert Panel Meeting November 2015 Warsaw, Poland. Summary report

Federal Office for Immigration and Asylum (BFA) Asylum Procedure ASYLUM

Jamal AlFakhouri, Regional CO Coordinator MENA Region

COUNTRY FACTSHEET: CZECH REPUBLIC 2013

UNITED NATIONS HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR REFUGEES Regional Office for the Benelux and the European Institutions

THE GOVERNMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF CROATIA OFFICE FOR HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE RIGHTS OF NATIONAL MINORITIES

COUNTRY CHAPTER IRE IRELAND BY THE GOVERNMENT OF IRELAND

COUNTRY OPERATIONS PLAN. Country: Lebanon

Integrating refugees and other immigrants into the labour market Key findings from OECD work

Exchange Visit to Measures to Address Return and Reintegration of Migrants Returned from the EU France, Netherlands & Belgium October 2016

Transcription:

ERN+ Webinar Series on Complementary Pathways of Refugee Admission in Europe Enhancing Humanitarian Admission in Europe Webinar 23 March 2017

The European Resettlement Network European Resettlement Network: Supporting the development of resettlement in Europe since 2010 by connecting a variety of actors involved in refugee resettlement 3,000 stakeholders from national, regional, local government, international organisations, civil society, volunteers, academics, refugees, and others working in all stages of the resettlement process

ERN+ Project Exploring complementary pathways of refugee admission to Europe Developing examples of models on complementary forms of admission in consultation with all relevant actors Identifying possibilities for the implementation of pilot projects in selected European countries

Resettlement and the need for Complementary Pathways Record numbers of displaced persons worldwide 1.2 million refugees in need of resettlement in 2017, according to UNHCR s Projected Global Resettlement Needs Contribution of the European Union to global resettlement remains modest Approximately 28,000 submissions to European resettlement countries in 2016 of a global total of 160,000

Complementary Pathways Potential to develop alternative forms of admission to address the needs of refugees globally Pathways can include private sponsorship programmes, student scholarships as well as other forms of humanitarian admission programmes, such as enhanced family reunification Global Refugee Sponsorship Initiative (GRSI) Government of Canada, UNHCR, the University of Ottawa, the Radcliffe Foundation, and the Open Society Foundations

Webinar Programme PART I - An introduction to Humanitarian admission programmes What are the core components of Humanitarian Admission Programmes? by Jo De Backer, IOM RO Brussels Resettlement and Relocation Specialist How can visas issued on humanitarian grounds for protection seeking purposes facilitate humanitarian admission? by Kristiina Lilleorg, IOM RO Brussels Immigration and Border Management Specialist The Austrian HAP programme, by Barbara Kurz, Integration, Migration und Asyl expert at Caritas Austria; ARGE Consortium - Project Coordinator for HAP PART II Visas on humanitarian grounds as a tool for admission Issuance of visas for asylum by French authorities, by Séverine Origny Fleishman, Deputy Head of Department, Asylum and Protection Law, French Ministry of Interior, Directorate General for Foreign Nationals in France. SRC Counseling Services on Humanitarian visa for entry to Switzerland by Judith Huber, Migration Specialist, Swiss Red Cross, Department of Social Integration and Migration With further contributions from UNHCR on other relevant considerations to be taken into account Humanitarian admission programmes in Germany for beneficiaries of protection from Syria, by Janne Grote, German Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF)

Humanitarian admission schemes as a pathway Potential to offer a save and legal pathway for those in need of international protection Complement - and not a replacement - to States traditional resettlement programmes May be used for specific groups of refugees such as vulnerable persons, extended family members or individuals with medical needs Expedited mechanism granting (temporary) international protection depending upon a State s legislation

Humanitarian admission schemes as a pathway Safeguards need to be in place to ensure clear legal status, protection needs - including psycho-social well-being of refugees - are met. Existing and past examples, with many recent initiatives focusing on Syrians Diverse in nature, eligibility criteria, length of residence granted, support provided etc. Within such programmes, visas issued on humanitarian grounds (for protection-seeking purposes) could facilitate refugee admission

Core components of Humanitarian Admission Programmes Use of identification and referral sources other than UNHCR including through Churches, NGOs, family members in receiving countries and selfreferral by Syrian refugees at embassies in countries of first asylum Consideration of cases other than those submitted on the basis of UNHCR submission categories, though on the basis of vulnerability criteria

Core components of Humanitarian Admission Programmes (2) Family reunification (sub)places going beyond reuniting with nuclear family ; providing access to the territory through visa instruments, often having a sponsorship component; time-limited application period and few considerations for individual vulnerability Need for protection-centered programmes, not substitute existing protection places; and include a number of protection principles such as non-discrimination, family unity, do not harm and give access to rights, services and integration support

Use of visas issued on humanitarian grounds for protection-seeking purposes EU legislation (LTV Visa 90 days) vs. National legislation (individual provisions) Persisting gap in regional & national legislation allows for inconsistent entitlement (individual discretion of MS, unclear definition humanitarian grounds and lack targeted procedures specifically for those in need of protection under EU law) Tool to access the EU MS border, not necessarily granting entry <-> protection programme Meant to complement existing schemes (including resettlement, humanitarian admission and others) to ensure safe, legal access Introduction to examples of MS using humanitarian visas for protection-seeking purposes

PART II: Specific examples - visas issued on humanitarian grounds Issuance of visas for asylum by French authorities Presentation by Séverine Origny Fleishman, Deputy Head of Department, Asylum and Protection Law, French Ministry of Interior, Directorate General for Foreign Nationals in France.

Other considerations to take into account Concluding remarks by David Watt, UNHCR Bureau for Europe