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The Refugee Crisis and the Executive: On the Limits of Administrative Discretion in the Common European Asylum System

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2019

Abstract

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While the Dublin System was meant to create a clear and fair division of responsibilities for the examination of applications for international protection, the recent refugee crisis highlighted the extent to which normative aspirations and political realities can diverge. That said, the Dublin System does allow for a certain degree of flexibility: By exercising the discretionary right to assume responsibility under the so-called “sovereignty clause” of Article 17, paragraph 1 of the Dublin III Regulation, Member States can examine asylum applications even when they would not formally have jurisdiction for doing so according to the criteria established by the Dublin System. Germany has relied upon this right extensively during the refugee crisis. Against this backdrop, the following contribution analyzes the reasons for, and limits of, multilevel administrative discretion in the Common European Asylum System. It argues that when a Member State exercises the right to assume responsibility in a sweeping manner, i.e. in hundreds of thousands of cases, it runs the risk of overstretching the legal limits of its discretionary powers. National administrative bodies can only invoke the right to assume responsibility insofar as this does not amount to game-changing decisions by the executive or unilateral decision-making without transnational coordination – particularly when such decisions have severe transnational consequences.

Type
Special issue - Constitutional Dimensions of the Refugee Crisis
Copyright
Copyright © 2016 by German Law Journal, Inc. 

References

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101 This is reflected in the European Commission's first reaction on August 25, 2015, which, as reported by Euractiv, spoke of an “act of European solidarity.” http://www.euractiv.com/section/global-europe/news/germany-suspends-dublin-agreement-for-syrian-refugees/ Google Scholar

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109 Cf. Thomas Spijkerboer, Fact Check: Did ‘Wir Schaffen Das’ Lead to Uncontrolled Mass Migration?, Border Criminologies Blog (Sept. 28, 2016), https://www.law.ox.ac.uk/research-subject-groups/centre-criminology/centreborder-criminologies/blog/2016/09/fact-check-did-, arguing that it is “quite possible” that Germany's refugee policy contributed to asylum seekers choosing Germany, while at the same time suggesting that it is “highly unlikely” that it influenced the number of Syrian asylum seekers and refugees in Europe in autumn 2015.Google Scholar

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112 See 2015: Mehr Asylanträge in Deutschland als jemals zuvor, Bundesministerium des Innern (Jan. 6, 2016), http://www.bmi.bund.de/SharedDocs/Pressemitteilungen/DE/2016/01/asylantraege-dezember-2015.html, determined on the basis of the so-called EASY system, which does not exclude multiple registrations, on one hand, but does not reflect the number of non-registrations, on the other.Google Scholar

113 See 890.000 Asylsuchende im Jahr 2015, Bundesministerium des Innern (Sept. 30, 2016), http://www.bmi.bund.de/SharedDocs/Pressemitteilungen/DE/2016/09/asylsuchende-2015.html.Google Scholar

114 Alongside several other Member States, in particular Sweden, Hungary, and Austria, cf. BAMF, Asylgeschäftsstatistik 3/2016, p. 10, http://www.bamf.de/SharedDocs/Anlagen/DE/Downloads/Infothek/Statistik/Asyl/201603-statistik-anlage-asyl-geschaeftsbericht.pdf?__blob=publicationFile.Google Scholar

115 BAMF introduced the simplified asylum procedure for Syrians and members of Iraqi religious minorities on November 18, 2014, extended it to Eritreans on June 25, 2015, and suspended it again at the beginning of 2016. In order to be recognized as GCR refugees, Syrians had to affirm the following statement in the questionnaire: “I fear persecution in Syria on behalf of my race, religion, nationality, political beliefs or membership in a particular social group and thus request to be recognized as a refugee in Germany.”Google Scholar

116 These characteristics include race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion.Google Scholar

117 For a more elaborate discussion of the challenge of refugee legal classification, see Markard, Nora, Kriegsflüchtlinge 151 et seq., 303 et seq. (2012).Google Scholar

118 See Directive, Qualification, Directive 2011/95/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council, 2011 O.J. (L 337/9), in particular Article 18 in connection with Article 2 lit. f and Article 15.Google Scholar

119 This specifically applies to the right of family reunification, which is obligatory only for GCR refugees according to Articles 9 et seq. of Directive 2003/86/EC, 2003 O.J. (L 251/12). At the same time, in Germany, the federal legislature in its amendment of the Residence Act (section 29 para. 2 sentence 2, taking effect on August 1, 2015) ceased to distinguish between those recognized as GCR refugees and those receiving subsidiary protection. This was changed in the course of a political U-turn before the end of 2015 when the legislature again reintroduced a different treatment. For details, see Thym, Daniel, Schnellere und strengere Asylverfahren, 23 Neue Zeitschrift für Verwaltungsrecht 1625, 1632 (2015).Google Scholar

120 See BAMF, Asylgeschäftsstatistik 12/2015, p. 7 (regarding first applications), http://www.bamf.de/SharedDocs/Anlagen/DE/Downloads/Infothek/Statistik/Asyl/201512-statistik-anlage-asyl-geschaeftsbericht.pdf?__blob=publicationFile. The GCR recognition rate was thus significantly higher than the EU average at the time, see Eurostat, Asylum Quarterly Report 3/2015, tables 6 and 9, http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/documents/6049358/7005580/Asylum+quarterly+report+-+Q3+2015.pdf/b265b920-3027-4e69-95cf-63f8fb8c80ed. Other Member States, particularly Sweden, were much more likely to grant subsidiary protection.Google Scholar

121 In the month of September 2016, out of 33,698 applicants from Syria, 23,909 (71 %) were granted subsidiarity protection, while roughly 9,000 (27%) were recognized as GCR refugees, cf. http://www.faz.net/aktuell/politik/fluechtlingskrise/asyl-statistik-immer-weniger-syrer-erhalten-vollen-fluechtlingsschutz-14478121.html.Google Scholar

122 Ibid. Whether or not the new practice will be confirmed by the courts remains to be seen.Google Scholar

123 This was at least the criticism of French Prime Minister Valls, in an interview with the BBC (Jan. 22, 2016), http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-35391084.Google Scholar

124 Individual attempts of explanation, in turn, differ with regard to their underlying assumptions and empirical methods. For an overview see Franck Düvell, Europäische und internationale Migration 99 et seq. (2006).Google Scholar

125 This is prominently reflected in the theory of “cumulative causation”, cf. Massey, Douglas S., Economic DEVELOPMENT AND INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE, POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT REVIEW 383, 396 et seq. (1988). The American migration scholar Demetrios Papademetriou, among others, specifically recognized a self-reinforcing impact in the German refugee policy, see Migration produziert mehr Migration, Zeit-Online, Nov. 22, 2015, http://www.zeit.de/2015/45/migration-fluechtlinge-grenzen-grenzsicherung-interview.Google Scholar

126 Cf. French PM Manuel Valls, supra note 123.Google Scholar

127 Cf. the conclusions of Ruud Koopmans, How to Make Europe's Immigration Policies More Efficient and Humane, 4 Am. Pol. Sci. Ass'n 55, 57 (2016), https://higherlogicdownload.s3.amazonaws.com/APSANET/e5be2e91-9721-4513-acb8-799a93991666/UploadedImages/Newsletters/APSACitizenshipMigrationNewsletter_4(2)_final.pdf. As a coordination measure, the one-off telephonic consultation with the heads of state of Austria and (later) Hungary would have sufficed only, if at all, to manage the concrete emergency situation at the Hungarian border.Google Scholar

128 On the issue of waving through, see the “17-point plan” in European Commission Press Release IP/15/5904, Meeting on the Western Balkans Migration Route: Leaders Agree on 17-point plan of action (Oct. 25, 2015), discussing the result of the special meeting on the Balkan route of October 24–25, 2015.Google Scholar

129 Christian Joerges, Integration durch Entrechtlichung?, in Governance in einer sich wandelnden Welt 213, 224 et seq. (Schuppert, Gunnar F. & Michael Zürn eds. 2008). The underlying assumptions of legitimation through those affected by a state's actions may be questioned, of course. The discussion here is limited to the specific context of the European Union, which—unlike in traditional third party contexts—already recognized a supranational civilian democratic foundation with its EU citizenship.Google Scholar

130 Article 78, para. 2 TFEU.Google Scholar

131 Regulation 2016/399 of the European Parliament and of the Council of March, 9 2016 on a Union Code on the rules governing the movement of persons across borders (Schengen Borders Code) – formerly Regulation 562/2006 – [hereinafter SBC].Google Scholar

132 As of January 2016, this rule is again applied to refugees seeking protection at the German-Austrian border who do not express their desire to apply for asylum but suggest that they want to continue their journey to Sweden.Google Scholar

133 And who do not belong to the group of people listed in Article 6 Abs. 5 SBC.Google Scholar

134 Peukert et al., supra note 99. Peukert and his co-authors disregard this provision when they postulate a right to refuse entry along the lines of Article 14, paragraph 1, sentence 1 of the SBC, according to which—contrary to Article 3 para. 1 of the Dublin III Regulation—an asylum application issued to German border officials at the German-Austrian border is to be considered issued within Austrian sovereign territory, so that Austria would have jurisdiction for evaluating the claim according to Article 20, para. 4 of the Dublin III Regulation. It is, moreover, questionable whether Article 20, paragraph 4 of the Dublin III Regulation even extends to this constellation.Google Scholar

135 This refers back to Articles 20 et seq. of the Dublin III Regulation.Google Scholar

136 Section 18 paragraph 2 No 2 AsylG.Google Scholar

137 Section 18 paragraph 2 No 1, para. 4 in connection with section 26a AsylG.Google Scholar

138 Cf. Holger Winkelmann, § 18 AsylG, in Ausländerrecht (Jan Bergmann & Klaus Dienelt eds., 2nd ed. 2016), para. 23.Google Scholar

139 The same applies to deportation, see section 57 of the Aufenthaltsgesetz [AufenthG] [Residence Act], July 30, 2004, BGBl I. [hereinafter Residence Act].Google Scholar

140 Section 18 para. 4 No 1 AsylGGoogle Scholar

141 Cf. Roman Lehner, Grenze auf, Grenze zu? Die transnationale Wirkung von Rechtsverstößen im Dublin-System, Verfassungsblog (Oct. 30, 2015), http://verfassungsblog.de/grenze-auf-grenze-zu-die-transnationale-wirkung-von-rechtsverstoessen-im-dublin-system/. This is also why an order on the basis of section 18 Abs. 4 No 2 AsylG would largely be futile. By contrast, Christian Hillgruber claims that in “the absence of such an order, the unencumbered entry of the many (Syrian) refugees would be blatantly illegal.”, see Hillgruber, Christian, Ein Geheimerlass zur Öffnung der Grenze?, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (Jan. 21, 2016), http://www.faz.net/aktuell/politik/staat-und-recht/fluechtlinge-ein-geheimerlass-zur-oeffnung-der-grenze-14024916.html.Google Scholar

142 Bast & Möllers, supra note 100.Google Scholar

143 On Article 20, paragraph 4 of the Dublin III Regulation see supra note 134.Google Scholar

144 See Michl, Walther, Transitzonen für Flüchtlinge im Dublin-System?, Verfassungsblog (Oct. 14, 2015), http://verfassungsblog.de/wie-passen-transitzonen-fuer-fluechtlinge-ins-dublin-system/.Google Scholar

145 In cases in which, due to the absence of an official asylum application, there is no registration obligation according to Article 9, paragraph 1 of the Eurodac Regulation, Articles 7 et seq. of the SBC determines border controls and entry refusals.Google Scholar

146 “To come against one's own fact (is not allowed).”Google Scholar

147 For a different approach, see Lehner, supra note 141.Google Scholar

148 The provision does not employ the term “burden of proof.” Article 22, paragraphs 2–5 of the Dublin III Regulation do suggest, however, that the burden of proof, in the sense of formal evidence and indications, is incumbent upon the requesting state.Google Scholar

149 Cf. Jürgen Bast, Aufenthaltsrecht und Migrationssteuerung 189 (2011).Google Scholar