Migrations in Europe: Fears due to the enlargement of the EU to the East

The European Union is confronted with the biggest enlargement in its history: ten states, among them eight middle European - the so called "buffer zone" in the new European migration landscape - will become members in 2004. Other candidates hope to join in the coming years. For all Eastern...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Morokvašić Mirjana
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institute of Social Science, Belgrade 2003-01-01
Series:Stanovništvo
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0038-982X/2003/0038-982X0304131M.pdf
id doaj-c336e221782e4fb9ad1f88ed7f40039e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c336e221782e4fb9ad1f88ed7f40039e2020-11-25T02:12:49ZengInstitute of Social Science, BelgradeStanovništvo0038-982X2003-01-01411-413114510.2298/STNV0304131MMigrations in Europe: Fears due to the enlargement of the EU to the EastMorokvašić MirjanaThe European Union is confronted with the biggest enlargement in its history: ten states, among them eight middle European - the so called "buffer zone" in the new European migration landscape - will become members in 2004. Other candidates hope to join in the coming years. For all Eastern and Eastern European countries, including those that are not candidates, the end of the bi-polar world meant a hope of "return to Europe". When shifting its borders to the East, the European Union both includes and excludes. The final objective to achieve Europe as "a space of freedom, security and justice", is conditioned by the capacity and necessity to control the migratory flows. The prospect of free circulation for the citizens of the new Union members entails also fears: the EU countries are afraid of the consequences the enlargement would have on migratory flows from the countries of the Central and Eastern Europe and which transit through that area. The perception of migrants as a threat inspired the conditions that the Union imposed on the candidate countries concerning migration policy issues and which mostly focus on the protection of its Eastern borders. For the future Union members however, protecting of the thousand of kilometers of their Eastern border, implies a number of quite different problems. These countries are afraid of the impact the restrictive measures they are obliged to implement would have both on many economic and family ties which have been maintained since the socialist period and on more recently engaged cooperation with the neighbours which are not candidates. The challenge of enlargement is different therefore for the EU members, for the candidate countries and for those who are for the moment excluded from the process. The fears do not seem to be always grounded. Thus, the impact of enlargement which, it was feared, could have been so destabilizing for the Union because of potentially large migration flows, is more likely to be destabilizing for the new candidate countries, especially concerning their relations with their neighbours excluded from the enlargement process. http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0038-982X/2003/0038-982X0304131M.pdfmigrationmigration policyenlargement of the European Union
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Morokvašić Mirjana
spellingShingle Morokvašić Mirjana
Migrations in Europe: Fears due to the enlargement of the EU to the East
Stanovništvo
migration
migration policy
enlargement of the European Union
author_facet Morokvašić Mirjana
author_sort Morokvašić Mirjana
title Migrations in Europe: Fears due to the enlargement of the EU to the East
title_short Migrations in Europe: Fears due to the enlargement of the EU to the East
title_full Migrations in Europe: Fears due to the enlargement of the EU to the East
title_fullStr Migrations in Europe: Fears due to the enlargement of the EU to the East
title_full_unstemmed Migrations in Europe: Fears due to the enlargement of the EU to the East
title_sort migrations in europe: fears due to the enlargement of the eu to the east
publisher Institute of Social Science, Belgrade
series Stanovništvo
issn 0038-982X
publishDate 2003-01-01
description The European Union is confronted with the biggest enlargement in its history: ten states, among them eight middle European - the so called "buffer zone" in the new European migration landscape - will become members in 2004. Other candidates hope to join in the coming years. For all Eastern and Eastern European countries, including those that are not candidates, the end of the bi-polar world meant a hope of "return to Europe". When shifting its borders to the East, the European Union both includes and excludes. The final objective to achieve Europe as "a space of freedom, security and justice", is conditioned by the capacity and necessity to control the migratory flows. The prospect of free circulation for the citizens of the new Union members entails also fears: the EU countries are afraid of the consequences the enlargement would have on migratory flows from the countries of the Central and Eastern Europe and which transit through that area. The perception of migrants as a threat inspired the conditions that the Union imposed on the candidate countries concerning migration policy issues and which mostly focus on the protection of its Eastern borders. For the future Union members however, protecting of the thousand of kilometers of their Eastern border, implies a number of quite different problems. These countries are afraid of the impact the restrictive measures they are obliged to implement would have both on many economic and family ties which have been maintained since the socialist period and on more recently engaged cooperation with the neighbours which are not candidates. The challenge of enlargement is different therefore for the EU members, for the candidate countries and for those who are for the moment excluded from the process. The fears do not seem to be always grounded. Thus, the impact of enlargement which, it was feared, could have been so destabilizing for the Union because of potentially large migration flows, is more likely to be destabilizing for the new candidate countries, especially concerning their relations with their neighbours excluded from the enlargement process.
topic migration
migration policy
enlargement of the European Union
url http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0038-982X/2003/0038-982X0304131M.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT morokvasicmirjana migrationsineuropefearsduetotheenlargementoftheeutotheeast
_version_ 1724908101266571264