¶ … Submitted to the Faculty of the Division of the International Relations and Diplomacy
In Candidacy For The Degree Of Master Of Philosophy
A number of developments are challenging the national identity and interests of Western European countries. Primary among these are the supranational integration and sovereignty sharing that is occurring between the European Union (EU) member state governments and the EU governance organs, the ongoing inward migration of peoples from the global South and East into EU countries, as well as the continued elaboration and application of human rights, which is of particular importance to potential migrants and EU residents of non-European origin. The existence of increasing migratory flows and a growing number of settled immigrant communities demands a policy response from the EU and its member states to address the situation of immigrant minorities "particularly with regards to the rights to be (or not to be) conferred upon them" (Geddes 1995:198).
Using a constructivist theoretical framework, the researcher aims to explore the extent to which the international human rights discourse has influenced the formulation of a common EU immigration policy, specifically the Council Directive on the Right to Family Reunification for Third Country Nationals. It will examine the national and regional conditions under which international norms, defined as ideas about appropriate behaviour held in common by a group of actors with a given identity, affect (supranational) institutional change. The researcher intends to investigate the human rights norms that have been taken into account by EU policymakers, and then, using a feminist analysis, interrogate the appropriateness and adequacy of those norms as a basis for immigration policy. The explicit acknowledgement and the attempt to codify the rights of migrants in the European Union is an encouraging development; however, this research will explore the ways in which immigration legislation in Europe has been gendered to the detriment of migrant women and the ways in which the human rights discourse itself is gendered.
Since the Maastricht Treaty (1993), immigration has become a regular feature of the EU policy agenda, yet, as the example of the final family reunification directive demonstrates, this fact does not necessarily entail that member states are willingly relinquishing their national sovereignty to a supranational authority. This research supports the work of scholars who have developed and contributed to the "venue shopping" approach (Guiraudon 2000, 2003; Larsen 2004). The venue-shopping model posits that member-state government elites have made a tactical choice to pursue immigration policymaking within the Council of Ministers at the supranational level in order to circumvent domestic constraints. These constraints take the form of human rights norms codified in national constitutions and the activities of advocacy groups which serve to limit the latitude that interior and justice ministers can take in devising and implementing restrictive immigration policies. A close analysis of current immigration legislation leads one to conclude that certain member-state parties have successfully exploited the EU institutional structure to further legitimize and entrench across the EU a particular security-oriented understanding of national interest in regard to immigration policy.
The Historical Context
Cooperation on immigration policy is a fairly recent occurrence in Europe. In the post war period of economic expansion and institution building, immigration policy was framed in the European Communities mainly as a question of social and economic rights and the desire to create a single market in labour. The labour importing European countries competed to acquire the "best" immigrants and set up the most beneficial labour migration agreements with exporting countries -- mainly Southern European states and former colonies. In the 1970s, in response to the global recession, the traditional immigration countries suspended economic migration across the board. Although each country adopted a similar policy stance, there was little coordination or practical consideration of how the closing of borders and the cessation of labour importation might affect neighbouring countries.
In recent years, immigration has become a hot button issue across Europe; many of the "problems" associated with both the waves of incoming migrants and the existing communities of long-term resident immigrants are the topic of frequent and ongoing public debate. The subject of this study will be EU policy that addresses legal third-country migrants -- in particular first-generation non-European women migrants, who immigrate for purposes of family reunification.
Since the political and social upheavals in Europe in the 1980s and 90s, immigration policymaking in general has been caught up in the political controversy over asylum. Many policymakers suspected that the upsurge in the number of asylum seekers was largely comprised of...
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