3 research outputs found
Terrorism and Asylum (RLI Working Paper Series Mini-volume)
Contents
31. Introduction (page 1)
Guest editor: James C. Simeon
32. Refugees, terrorism and Article 1 of the Refugee Convention (page 6)
Patricia Tuitt
33. An introduction to the common security narrative of terrorism and asylum and its influence on Austrian migration law (page 17)
Julia Kienast
34. The fight against terrorism and the need for international protection: the Hungarian solution (page 32)
Barbara Kőhalmi and Anita Rozália Nagy-Nádasdi
35. Manufacturing fear: The social component of anti-immigration policies in the United States (page 46)
Selina March
36. Terrorism and exclusion from asylum in international and national law (page 56)
James C. Simeo
Hungarian Constitutional Identity and the ECJ Decision on Refugee Quota
The outcome of the lawsuit launched by the Hungarian Government against the EU Council’s decision on compulsory relocation of asylum seekers before the European Court of Justice (ECJ) took no-one by surprise, neither in Budapest nor elsewhere. Some may have hoped that the complaint would succeed legally, but nevertheless it has always been primarily a part of a well-devised political strategy based on the idea of national identity as a concept of constitutional and EU law.</p