Refugees as Migrant Workers after the Global Compacts? Can Labour Migration Serve as a Complementary Pathway for People in Need of Protection into Sweden and Germany?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Legal Feasibility of Using General Labour Migration Frameworks as Pathways for People in Need of Protection
2.1. The Swedish Aliens Act and the German Skilled Immigration Act as Basis for Work-Based Pathways for People in Need of Protection
2.2. Existing Challenges to Legal Feasibility of Such Approach
2.2.1. Employer Organisations’ Perceptions
2.2.2. Identifying Potential Beneficiaries of Such Complementary Pathways
2.2.3. Visa Procedure and Travel Documents
2.2.4. Recognition of Qualifications
2.2.5. Language Knowledge
2.2.6. Security of Status and Labour Exploitation
3. Legal Feasibility of Using Other National Policies as Models for Work-Based Complementary Pathways for People in Need of Protection
3.1. ‘Western Balkans Regulation’
3.2. Community Sponsorship
4. Political Feasibility of Facilitating Work-Based Complementary Pathways for People in Need of Protection
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
- Ahlén, Anton, and Joakim Palme. 2020. Migrants’ Access to Social Protection in Sweden. In Migration and Social Protection in Europe and Beyond. Edited by Jean-Michel Lafleur and Daniela Vintila. IMISCOE Research Series; Cham: Springer, vol. 1, pp. 421–35. [Google Scholar]
- Arendt, Hannah. 1996. We Refugees. The Menorah Journal. Reprinted in Altogether elsewhere: Writers on Exile. Edited by Marc Robinson. Boston and London: Faber and Faber, pp. 110–19. First published 1943. [Google Scholar]
- Atak, Idil, and François Crépeau. 2021. Refugees as Migrants. In The Oxford Handbook of International Refugee Law. Edited by Cathryn Costello, Michelle Foster and Jane McAdam. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 134–51. [Google Scholar]
- Barnett, Laura. 2002. Global Governance and the Evolution of the International Refugee Regime. International Journal of Refugee Law 14: 238–62. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- BenEzer, Gadi, and Roger Zetter. 2015. Searching for Directions: Conceptual and Methodological Challenges in Researching Refugee Journeys. Journal of Refugee Studies 28: 297–318. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Bivand Erdal, Marta, and Ceri Oeppen. 2018. Forced to leave? The discursive and analytical significance of describing migration as forced and voluntary. Journal of Ethnic & Migration Studies 44: 981–98. [Google Scholar]
- Bond, Jennifer, and Ania Kwadrans. 2019. Resettling Refugees through Community Sponsorship: A Revolutionary Operational Approach Built on Traditional Legal Infrastructure. Refuge: Canada’s Journal on Refugees 35: 87–109. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Bond, Jennifer, and Gregory A. Maniatis. 2022. Community Sponsorship of Refugees. In Forced Displacement and Migration. Edited by Hans-Joachim Preuß, Christoph Beier and Dirk Messner. Wiesbaden: Springer, pp. 189–203. [Google Scholar]
- Brücker, Herbert, Mariella Falkenhain, Tanja Fendel, Markus Promberger, and Miriam Raab. 2021. Labour Migration to Germany Based on the Western Balkans Regulation: Strong Demand and Sound Labour Market Integration. IAB-Kurzbericht 202016. Nürnberg: Institut für Arbeitsmarkt- und Berufsforschung (IAB). [Google Scholar]
- Calleman, Calleman. 2015. Byta spår: Ett nålsöga mellan asyl och arbete. In Arbetskraft från hela världen: Hur blev det med 2008 års reform. Edited by Catharina Calleman and Petra Herzfeld Olsson. Stockholm: Delegationen för migrationsstudier, pp. 296–97. [Google Scholar]
- Carling, Jørgen. 2015. Refugees are Also Migrants. And All Migrants Matter. Available online: http://bordercriminologies.law.ox.ac.uk/refugees-are-also-migrants/ (accessed on 7 July 2022).
- Castles, Stephen. 2003. Towards a Sociology of Forced Migration and Social Transformation. Sociology 37: 13–34. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Chimni, Bhupinder. 1998. The Geopolitics of Refugee Studies: A View from the South. Journal of Refugee Studies 11: 350–74. [Google Scholar]
- Costello, Cathryn. 2015. Migrants and Forced Labour: A Labour Law Response. In The Autonomy of Labour Law. Edited by Alan Bogg, Cathryn Costello, A. C. L. Davies and Jeremias Prassl. London: Hart Publishing, pp. 189–227. [Google Scholar]
- Costello, Cathryn. 2019. Refugees and (Other) Migrants: Will the Global Compacts Ensure Safe Flight and Onward Mobility for Refugees? International Journal of Refugee Law 30: 643–49. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Crépeau, François. 2018. Towards a Mobile and Diverse World: ‘Facilitating Mobility’ as a Central Objective of the Global Compact on Migration. International Journal of Refugee Law 30: 650–56. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Davitti, Daria, and Zvezda Vankova. Forthcoming. Active Refugee Admission Policies and Refugee Finance: Towards a New Spectrum of Refugeehood? In From Borders to Pathways: Innovations and Regressions in the Movement of People into Europe. Edited by Matthew Zagor. Canberra: ANU E-Press.
- Davitti, Daria. 2021. Refugee Finance: External(ized) Protection and Investments for Refugees. Quaderni della Facolta’ di Giurisprudenza/Series of the Faculty of Law; Trento: University of Trento. [Google Scholar]
- De Lange, Tesseltje, and Kees Groenendijk. 2021. The EU’s Legal Migration Acquis: Patching up the Patchwork. European Policy Centre Issue Paper 17. Brussels: European Policy Centre. [Google Scholar]
- De Lange, Tesseltje, and Zvezda Vankova. Forthcoming. The Recast EU Blue Card Directive: Towards a Level Playing Field to Attract Highly Qualified Migrant Talent to Work in the EU? European Journal for Migration and Law.
- Endres de Oliveira, Pauline. 2020. Humanitarian Admission to Germany—Access vs. Rights ? In Humanitarian Admission to Europe: The Law between Promises and Constraints. Edited by Marie-Claire Foblets and Luc Leboeuf. Baden-Baden: Nomos. [Google Scholar]
- European Centre for the Development of Vocational Training (CEDEFOP). 2019. Creating lawful opportunities for adult refugee labour market mobility: A conceptual framework for a VET, skills and qualifications-based complementary pathway to protection. Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union. [Google Scholar]
- European Commission. 2018. Study on the Feasibility and Added Value of Sponsorship Schemes as a Possible Pathway to Safe Channels for Admission to the EU, Including Resettlement: Final Report. Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union. [Google Scholar]
- European Parliamentary Research Service (EPRS). 2017. Secondary Movements of Asylumseekersin the EU Asylum System, Briefing, PE 608.728. Available online: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/BRIE/2017/608728/EPRS_BRI(2017)608728_EN.pdf/ (accessed on 7 July 2022).
- Farcy, Jean-Baptiste. 2020. Labour Immigration Policy in the European Union: How to Overcome the Tension between Further Europeanisation and the Protection of National Interests? European Journal of Migration and Law 22: 198–223. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Fratzke, Susan, Lena Kainz, Hanne Beirens, Emma Dorst, and Jessica Bolter. 2019. Refugee Sponsorship Programs: A Global State of Play and Opportunities for Investment. Migration Policy Institute Policy Brief 15. Brussels: Migration Policy Institute Europe. [Google Scholar]
- Fratzke, Susan, Maria Belen Zanzuchi, Kate Hooper, Hanne Beirens, Lena Kainz, Nathan Benson, Eliza Bateman, and Jessica Bolter. 2021. Refugee Resettlement and Complementary Pathways: Opportunities for Growth. Geneva and Brussels: UNHCR and MPI Europe. [Google Scholar]
- Gammeltoft-Hansen, Thomas, and James Hathaway. 2015. Non-refoulement in a World of Cooperative Deterrence. Columbia Journal of Transnational Law 53: 235–85. [Google Scholar]
- Gammeltoft-Hansen, Thomas. 2014. International Refugee Law and Refugee Policy: The Case of Deterrence Policies. Journal of Refugee Studies 27: 574–95. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gammeltoft-Hansen, Thomas, and Nikolas Feith Tan. 2017. The End of the Deterrence Paradigm? Future Directions for Global Refugee Policy. Journal on Migration and Human Security 5: 28–56. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Gil-Bazo, María-Teresa. 2015. Asylum as a General Principle of International Law. International Journal of Refugee Law 27: 3–28. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gordon, Jennifer. 2021. The international governance of refugee work: Reflections on the Jordan compact. Global Public Policy and Governance 1: 239–55. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Guild, Elspeth, Kathryn Allinson, Nicolette Busuttil, and Maja Grundler. 2022. A Practitioners’ Handbook on the Common European Asylum System (CEAS) and EU and Member States’ Commitments under the UN Global Compact on Refugees and the UN Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration. PROTECT Deliverable no. 2.5. Bergen: PROTECT Consortium. [Google Scholar]
- Guild, Elspeth, Tugba Basaran, and Kathryn Allinson. 2019. From Zero to Hero? An analysis of the human rights protections within the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (GCM). International Migration 57: 43–59. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Haddad, Emma. 2003. The Refugee: The Individual between Sovereigns. Global Society 17: 297–322. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Hamlin, Rebecca. 2021. Crossing: How We Label and React to People on the Move. Redwood City: Stanford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Hashimoto, Naoko. 2021. Are New Pathways of Admitting Refugees Truly ‘Humanitarian’ and ‘Complementary’? Journal of Human Security Studies 10: 15–31. [Google Scholar]
- Hathaway, James C. 1992. The Emerging Politics of Non-Entrée. Refugees 91: 40–41. [Google Scholar]
- Hathaway, James C. 2005. The Rights of Refugees under International Law. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Hathaway, James C. 2007. Why Refugee Law Still Matters. Melbourne Journal of International Law 8: 89–103. [Google Scholar]
- Herzfeld Olsson, Petra. 2018. Towards Protection of Vulnerable Labour Migrants in Sweden: The Case of the Thai Berry Pickers. In Towards a Decent Labour Market for Low-Waged Migrant Workers. Edited by Conny Rijken and Tesseltje de Lange. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, pp. 149–68. [Google Scholar]
- Herzfeld Olsson, Petra. 2019. Något om betydelsen av anställningsvillkor i utlänningslagens mening. In Festskrift till Örjan Edström. Edited by Ruth Mannelqvist, Staffan Ingmanson and Carin Ulander-Wänman. Umeå: Juridiska institutionen, Umeå Universitet, pp. 149–64. [Google Scholar]
- Hirsch, Asher Lazarus, Khanh Hoang, and Anthea Vogl. 2019. Australia’s Private Refugee Sponsorship Program: Creating Complementary Pathways Or Privatising Humanitarianism? Refuge: Canada’s Journal on Refugees 35: 110–23. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Kolb, Holger. 2020. Das Fachkräfteeinwanderungsgesetz und die “Westbalkanregelung”—Spannungen und Widersprüche. ZAR 8: 267–80. [Google Scholar]
- Labman, Shauna. 2019. Crossing Law’s Border. Canada’s Refugee Resettlement Program. Vancouver and Toronto: UBC Press. [Google Scholar]
- Long, Katy, and Sarah Rosengaertner. 2016. Protection through Mobility: Opening Labor and Study Migration Channels to Refugees. Washington, DC: Migration Policy Initiative. [Google Scholar]
- Long, Katy. 2013. When refugees stopped being migrants: Movement, labour and humanitarian protection. Migration Studies 1: 4–26. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Long, Katy. 2015. From Refugee to Migrant? Labor Mobility’s Protection Potential. Washington, DC: Migration Policy Initiative. [Google Scholar]
- Majone, Giandomenico. 1975. The Feasibility of Social Policies. Policy Sciences 6: 49–69. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Manks, Michelle, Mehrangiz Monsef, and Dana Wagner. 2022. Sponsorship in the Context of Complementary Pathways Knowledge Brief. Ottawa: University of Ottawa and the Refugee Hub. [Google Scholar]
- Moreno-Lax, Violeta. 2017. Accessing Asylum in Europe. Extraterritorial Border Controls and Refugee Rights under EU Law. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Motomura, Hiroshi. 2020. The New Migration Law: Migrants, Refugees, and Citizens in an Anxious Age. Cornell Law Review 105: 457–548. [Google Scholar]
- Mourad, Lama, and Kelsey P. Norman. 2019. The World Is Turning Its Back on Refugees. The Atlantic. Available online: https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2019/12/world-turning-its-back-refugees/604042/ (accessed on 7 July 2022).
- Mourad, Lama, and Kelsey P. Norman. 2020. Transforming refugees into migrants: Institutional change and the politics of international protection. European Journal of International Relations 26: 687–713. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Orchard, Phil. 2014. A Right to Flee. Refugees, States, and the Construction of International Cooperation. Cambridge: Cambridge Univesrity Press. [Google Scholar]
- Parusel, Bernd. 2020. Legal Migration for Work and Training. Mobility Options to Sweden for Those not in Need of Protection. Delmi Report 2. Stockholm: Delmi. [Google Scholar]
- Pohlmann, Vanessa, and Helge Schwiertz. 2020. Private Sponsorship in Refugee Admission: Standard in Canada, Trend in Germany? Research Brief No. 2020/1. Toronto: Ryerson Centre for Immigration and Settlement (RCIS) and the CERC in Migration and Integration, Ryerson University. [Google Scholar]
- Ramji-Nogales, Jaya. 2017. Moving beyond the Refugee Law Paradigm. American Journal of International Law 111: 8–12. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Reyhani, Adel-Naim, and Gloria Golmohammadi. 2021. The Limits of Static Interests: Appreciating Asylum Seekers’ Contributions to a Country’s Economy in Article 8 ECHR Adjudication on Expulsion. International Journal of Refugee Law 33: 3–27. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ricci, Carola. 2020. The Necessity for Alternative Legal Pathways: The Best Practice of Humanitarian Corridors Opened by Private Sponsors in Italy. German Law Journal 21: 265–83. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Robert, Christopher, and Richard Zeckhauser. 2011. The Methodology of Normative Policy Analysis. Journal of Policy Analysis and Management 30: 613–43. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Squire, Vicki, Angeliki Dimitriadi, Nina Perkowski, Maria Pisani, Dallal Stevens, and Nick Vaughan-Williams. 2017. Crossing the Mediterranean Sea by Boat: Mapping and Documenting Migratory Journeys and Experiences. Final Project Report. Coventry: University of Warwick. [Google Scholar]
- Streeck, Wolfgang, and Kathleen Thelen, eds. 2005. Beyond Continuity: Institutional Change in Advanced Political Economies. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Tan, Nikolas Feith. 2020. Community Sponsorship, the Pact and the Compact: Towards Protection Principles, ASILE Forum. Available online: https://www.asileproject.eu/community-sponsorship-the-pact-and-the-compact-towards-protection-principles/ (accessed on 7 July 2022).
- Tan, Nikolas Feith. 2021. Community Sponsorship in Europe: Taking Stock, Policy Transfer and What the Future Might Hold. Frontiers in Human Dynamics 3: 564084. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Thym, Daniel. 2019. The German Migration Package: A New Deal on Labour Migration? EU Immigration and Asylum Law and Policy Blog. Available online: https://eumigrationlawblog.eu/the-german-migration-package-a-new-deal-on-labour-migration/ (accessed on 7 July 2022).
- UNHCR. 2018. Global Trends. Forced Displacement in 2017. Available online: https://www.unhcr.org/globaltrends2017/#:~:text=In%202017%2016.2%20million%20people,new%20high%20of%2068.5%20million/ (accessed on 7 July 2022).
- UNHCR. 2019a. Complementary Pathways for Admission of Refugees to Third Countries: Key Considerations. Available online: https://www.refworld.org/pdfid/5cebf3fc4.pdf/ (accessed on 7 July 2022).
- UNHCR. 2019b. Three-Year Strategy on Resettlement and Complementary Pathways (2019–2021). Available online: https://www.unhcr.org/protection/resettlement/5d15db254/three-year-strategy-resettlement-complementary-pathways.html/ (accessed on 7 July 2022).
- Vankova, Zvezda. 2022. Work-Based Pathways to Refugee Protection under EU Law: Pie in the Sky? European Journal of Migration and Law 24: 86–111. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wagner, Martin, and Caitlin Katsiaficas. 2021. Network and Mobility: A Case for Complementary Pathways. TRAFIG Policy Brief No. 3, 06/2021. Available online: https://www.icmpd.org/file/download/57082/file/TRAFIG%2520Policy%2520brief%25203.pdf (accessed on 7 July 2022).
- Welfens, Natalie. 2021. Whose (in)security counts in crisis? Selection categories in Germany’s humanitarian admission programmes before and after 2015. International Politics 59: 505–24. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Westerby, Rachel. 2020. When Refugees Become Migrants: State ‘Cherry-Picking’ for Refugee Protection. Refugee Law Initiative Blog. October 20. Available online: https://rli.blogs.sas.ac.uk/2020/10/20/when-refugees-become-migrants-state-cherry-picking-for-refugee-protection/ (accessed on 7 July 2022).
- Woolfson, Charles, Petra Herzfeld Olsson, and Christer Thörnqvist. 2012. Forced Labour and Migrant Berry Pickers in Sweden. International Journal of Comparative Labour Law and Industrial Relations 28: 147–76. [Google Scholar]
- Zetter, Roger. 2007. More Labels, Fewer Refugees: Making and Remaking the Refugee Label in an Era of Globalisation. Journal of Refugee Studies 20: 172–92. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
1 | United Nations General Assembly, New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants, Resolution No. A/RES/71/1 adopted on 19 September 2016, paras 77–79 and Annex I, paras 10 and 14–16. |
2 | Even though the Compacts uphold the migrant-refugee dichotomy and distinguish between complementary pathways reserved for recognised refugees and legal pathways for the rest of the migrants, these terms are used interchangeably in this article, using the New York Declaration, para 6 as point of reference. See further the Introduction to this Special Issue and Section 4 of this article. In addition, the terms work-based, labour migration-based and labour mobility pathways are also used interchangeably in this article. Since such pathways are discretionary, their target groups are determined by states and differ. See further (Vankova 2022). |
3 | United Nations, Report of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Part II: Global Compact on Refugees, General Assembly Official Records Seventy-third Session Supplement No. 12 (A/73/12 (Part II)), New York, 2018, para 95. |
4 | United Nations, Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 19 December 2018, Seventy-third session, A/RES/73/195, Annex: Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration, Objective 5, p. 12. |
5 | European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights, Legal Entry Channels to the EU for Persons in Need of International Protection: A Toolbox, 2015; European Commission, Towards a Reform of the Common European Asylum System and Enhancing Legal Avenues to Europe, COM (2016) 197; European Commission, Communication on a New Pact on Migration and Asylum, COM (2020) 609 final; European Commission, Recommendation on legal pathways to protection in the EU: promoting resettlement, humanitarian admission and other complementary pathways, C (2020) 6467 final, Brussels. |
6 | Under the EU-funded DT4E project, complementary labour mobility pathways will be piloted in Belgium, Ireland and Portugal. Yet, according to information provided by IOM, this is not expected to happen before the end of 2022/early 2023. The United Kingdom is also covered by this project and has already launched the Displaced Talent Mobility Pilot: https://www.talentbeyondboundaries.org/blog/introducing-the-uks-displaced-talent-mobility-pilot (accessed on 7 July 2022). |
7 | On the legal nature of the Compacts, see the Introduction to this Special Issue and the contribution of Favi. For a non-EU perspective on the implementation of the Compacts, see the contribution of Alexander and Singh in this Special Issue. |
8 | Respectively in absolute and relative terms. |
9 | See https://www.unhcr.org/resettlement-data.html (accessed on 7 July 2022). |
10 | Established in April 2022 in response to the 2019 UNHCR’s Three-Year Strategy on Resettlement and Complementary Pathways, Goal 2: Enabling actions, p. 23. See further https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/corporate/mandate/corporate-initiatives/global-task-force-refugee-labour-mobility.html (accessed on 7 July 2022). |
11 | European Commission, Communication on a New Pact on Migration and Asylum, COM (2020) 609 final, pp. 22–23. |
12 | European Commission, Commission recommendation on legal pathways to protection in the EU: promoting resettlement, humanitarian admission and other complementary pathways, COM (2020) 6467 final, p. 10. |
13 | Such as highly-skilled, seasonal workers, intra-corporate transferees and researchers. See further (Vankova 2022). |
14 | Directive (EU) 2021/1883 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 October 2021 on the conditions of entry and residence of third-country nationals for the purpose of highly qualified employment, and repealing Council Directive 2009/50/EC, [2021] OJ L 382. In 2019, Germany granted 28.858 Blue Card compared to 2.036 in France and 2.104 in Poland, which were the other two countries issuing most of the Blue Cards. Eurostat, <MIGR_RESBC1>, (last visited 1 March 2022). See further (De Lange and Groenendijk 2021; De Lange and Vankova Forthcoming). |
15 | Interview with a state official, Germany, 19 October 2020; Interview with a state official, Sweden, 2 March 2021. |
16 | Utlänningslag (2005: 716). |
17 | Interview with a state official, Sweden, 2 March 2021; Interview an academic with academic, Sweden, 25 February 2021. See further OECD, Recruiting Immigrant Workers: Sweden 2011, OECD, p. 32. It must be stressed, however, that the analysis in this article covers the period before June 2022, when the Swedish Alien Act’s amendments introduced a more restrictive approach. |
18 | Interview with a state official, Sweden, 2 March 2021. Yet, it needs to be noted that employers are obliged to advertise their vacancy through the Employment Service and EURES portal for 10 days in order to satisfy the EU principle of community preference but they do not need to justify their recruitment from a third country. See (Parusel 2020). Furthermore, there are pending changes concerning the reintroduction of a general labour market test. See Section 4. |
19 | Aliens Act, Chapter 6, Section 4. At the time of finalising this article, this rule has been tightened and currently applicants need to present a signed job contract. See Aliens Act, Chapter 6, Section 2. To be able to work in Sweden, a migrant now needs a work permit (Aliens Act Chapter 2, Section 7) and a residence permit for stays longer than 3 months (Chapter 2, Section 5). |
20 | Aliens Act, Chapter 2, Section 1; Chapter 6, Section 2. See also the proposal to increase the income level requirement from 1300 SEK to 29,500 SEK: https://www.regeringen.se/4a49f5/contentassets/44ea5209975849a4b758af78ebd8a442/ett-hojt-forsorjningskrav-for-arbetskraftsinvandrare-prop.-202122284.pdf (accessed on 7 July 2022). |
21 | Council Directive 2003/86/EC of 22 September 2003 on the right to family reunification [2003] OJ L 251. |
22 | This provision changed in June 2022 and currently the sponsor is subject to a maintenance requirement. See Government Bill, 2021:22:134 and Aliens Ordinance, Chapter 4, Section 4a. |
23 | Aliens Act, Chapter 6, Section 2a, 3st. |
24 | Aliens Act, Chapter 6, Section 1, 2st. and Section 2a, 3st. For the access to permanent residence, see Aliens Act, Chapter 5, Section 5. |
25 | Fachkräfteeinwanderungsgesetz (FEG), BGBl. I, Nr. 31, 20.8.2019, p. 1307–46. In force since 1 March 2020. |
26 | Interview with a state official, Germany, 19 October 2020; Interview with an expert, Germany, 20 October 2020. |
27 | Interview with a state official, Germany, 22 January 2021; Interview with a state official, Germany, 4 January 2021. |
28 | § 18 (2), (3), § 18a Aufenthaltsgesetz (AufenthG)/Residence Act. |
29 | § 18 (2), (3), § 18b AufenthG. |
30 | § 18 (2) No. 2, § 39 (2) AufenthG. |
31 | They need to demonstrate a salary of at least 55 per cent of the earnings ceiling of the general pension scheme. See further § 18 (2) No. 5 AufenthG. |
32 | § 20 (1) AufenthG. |
33 | § 17 (1) AufenthG. |
34 | § 17 (1) Nr. 2 and § 20 (4) 1 AufenthG. This is a general requirement for almost all residence titles according to § 5 (1) No 1 AufenthG. In the case of employment this requirement is usually fulfilled by the job contract. |
35 | § 17 (1) No. 3 AufenthG. The provision requires a school-leaving certificate issued by a German school abroad or a school-leaving certificate entitling the holder to access higher education in the federal territory or in the country where the school-leaving certificate was acquired. |
36 | § 16 (3) AufenthG. |
37 | Interview with an expert, Germany, 23 October 2020. |
38 | On the role of employers, see further (Vankova 2022, pp. 95–97). |
39 | Interview with an employers’ organization representative, Sweden, 6 April 2021. |
40 | Interview with an employers’ organization representative, Sweden, 6 April 2021. |
41 | Interview with an employers’ organization representative, Sweden, 6 April 2021. |
42 | Interview with an employers’ organization representative, Sweden, 6 April 2021. |
43 | Interview with an employers’ organisation representative, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
44 | Interview with an employers’ organization representative, Sweden, 6 April 2021. |
45 | Interview with an employers’ organisation representative, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
46 | Interview with an employers’ organisation representative, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
47 | Interview with an employers’ organization representative, Sweden, 28 April 2021; Interview with an employers’ organisation representative, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
48 | Interview with an employers’ organization representative, Sweden, 28 April 2021. |
49 | Interview with an employers’ organisation representative, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
50 | See also GCR, para 95. |
51 | Through the International Chamber of Commerce. |
52 | See also GCM’s objective 5. |
53 | GCR, para 95. |
54 | Interview with a NGO representative, Germany, 26 November 2020; Interview with state official, Germany, 19 October 2020. |
55 | Interview with a NGO representative, Germany, 26 November 2020; Interview with a NGO representative, UK, 7 December 2020. |
56 | See further https://www.talentbeyondboundaries.org/talentcatalog (accessed on 7 July 2022). |
57 | Interview with a state official, Germany, 19 October 2020. |
58 | Interview with an international organisation representative, Germany, 20 October 2020. |
59 | Interview with a state official, Germany, 19 October 2020 |
60 | Interview with a lawyer, Germany, 10 November 2020. |
61 | Interview with an employers’ organisation representative, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
62 | Interview with an employers’ organisation representative, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
63 | Interview with an employers’ organisation representative, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
64 | Interview with an international organisation representative, Sweden, 18 February 2021. |
65 | Interview with a lawyer, Germany, 10 November 2020. |
66 | Interview with a lawyer, Germany, 10 November 2020. |
67 | See GCM’ Objective 5 (d) and (f). |
68 | See further, (Vankova 2022, p. 101). |
69 | § 18 (2) No. 3 AufenthG. In case of academic non-regulated professions, however, only comparability is necessary. |
70 | Chapter 2 of Berufsqualifikationsfeststellungsgesetz (BQFG). For the list of documents required, see § 12 BQFG. It also needs to be stressed that there is a requirement for most regulated professions that a permission to practise a profession has been granted or promised for. See § 18 (2) No. 3 AufenthG. For the Swedish case, refer to Förordning (2012: 811) med instruktion för Universitets- och högskolerådet, Sections 5–7 and https://www.uhr.se/en/start/recognition-of-foreign-qualifications/ (accessed on 7 July 2022). |
71 | § 14 BQFG. Interview with a recognition advisor, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
72 | § 12 (6) BQFG. |
73 | § 11 BQFG. |
74 | Interview with a recognition advisor, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
75 | § 16d AufenthG. |
76 | § 16d AufenthG. |
77 | Interview with a representative of a regional authority, Sweden, 2 March 2021. |
78 | Interview with a think thank representative, Sweden, 7 April 2021. |
79 | Interview with a representative of a regional authority, Sweden, 2 March 2021. |
80 | Interview with a lawyer, Germany, 10 November 2020. |
81 | Interview with a state official, Germany, 22 January 2021. See further (Kolb 2020, p. 267). |
82 | Interview with an employers’ organisation representative, Germany, 14 May 2021; Interview with a state official, Sweden, 13 April 2021. |
83 | Interview with an expert, Germany, 23 October 2020 |
84 | Interview with a recognition advisor, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
85 | Interview with a state official, Sweden, 13 April 2021. |
86 | E.g., refugees in some German states can apply for financial support or sholarships for translation costs or to do some courses as part of the qualifications recognition process. Interview with a recognition advisor, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
87 | Interview with an employers’ organisation representative, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
88 | Para 95. |
89 | Para 69. See also para 71. The UK’s Refugee Nurse Support Programme provides a good example for recognition facilitation in a regulated profession: https://www.sanctuarypersonnel.com/blog/2022/07/refugee-nurses-boost-nhs-workforce?source=google.com (accessed on 7 July 2022). |
90 | See further GCM’s objective 18. |
91 | Objective 18 (h). |
92 | Interview with an expert, Germany, 23 October 2020; Interview with a trade union representative, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
93 | Interview with a NGO representative, Sweden, 12 March 2021. |
94 | Interview with an expert, Germany, 23 October 2020. |
95 | Para 99. |
96 | For international standards that needs to be considered when developing such pathways, see further (Vankova 2022, pp. 92–94) and UNHCR Guidelines on International Legal Standards Relating to Decent Work for Refugees, July 2021, available at https://www.refworld.org/docid/60e5cfd74.html (accessed on 7 July 2022) |
97 | Interview with an academic, Sweden, 25 February 2021; Interview with a trade union representative, Sweden, 2 March 2021; Interview with a think-thank representative, Sweden, 7 April 2021. |
98 | Interview with a trade union representative, Sweden, 2 March 2021. |
99 | Interview with a trade union representative, Sweden, 2 March 2021. |
100 | Interview with a trade union representative, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
101 | See Aliens Act, Chapter 7, Section 7e. |
102 | MIG 2017: 25. |
103 | See further (Herzfeld Olsson 2019). See also the Inquiry into improved system for labour migration, SOU 2021:5. |
104 | See Government Bill 2021/22:134 and the Parliament bet. 2021/22:SfU22. |
105 | See further UNHCR Guidelines on International Legal Standards Relating to Decent Work for Refugees, July 2021. |
106 | See objective 6. |
107 | Refer to § 26 (2) Beschäftigungsverordnung (BeschV)/Employment Ordinance. |
108 | In line with § 39 (2) AufenthG. |
109 | § 26 (2) sentence 3 BeschV. |
110 | Refer to §§ 9 and 9a AufenthG. |
111 | Refer to § 29 AufenthG. |
112 | Refer to German Social Codes SGB II and SGB III. |
113 | Interview with a trade union representative, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
114 | Interview with an expert, Germany, 20 October 2020. For the critique of this regulation, see for instance (Kolb 2020, p. 267). |
115 | Interview with an academic, Germany, 12 May 2021. |
116 | Interview with a state official, Sweden, 26 February 2021. |
117 | See further (Woolfson et al. 2012; Herzfeld Olsson 2018). |
118 | Prop. 2020/21:191, pp. 67–68, SOU 2021:54, p. 74ff; SOU 2021:2. |
119 | See largely (Labman 2019, pp. 81–109). |
120 | See further (Bond and Maniatis 2022). |
121 | New York Declaration, GA Res 71/1, UNGAOR, 71st Session, UN Doc A/Res/71/1. |
122 | GCR, Para 95. |
123 | European Commission, Recommendation on legal pathways to protection in the EU: promoting resettlement, humanitarian admission and other complementary pathways, C (2020) 6467 final, Brussels (2020) para 22. |
124 | European Commission, Study on the Feasibility and Added Value of Sponsorship Schemes as a Possible Pathway to Safe Channels for Admission to the EU, Including Resettlement: Final Report, 2018. |
125 | See the Asylum, Migration and Integration Fund’s call available at https://ec.europa.eu/migrant-integration/news/amif-funding-call-2020-complementary-pathways-for-protection-and-integration (accessed on 7 July 2022). |
126 | Interview with European Commission representatives, Belgium, 14 April 2021; Interview with an international organisation representative, Belgium, 7 April 2021; Interview with a NGO representative, Belgium, 12 April 2021. |
127 | See further (Manks et al. 2022). |
128 | See for instance, Growing Jobs: Sponsor Offers Refugees Greenhouse Jobs: https://www.rstp.ca/en/resources/videos/growing-jobs-sponsor-offers-refugees-greenhouse-jobs/ (accessed on 7 July 2022). |
129 | Interview with a NGO representative, Belgium, 10 November 2020. On humanitarian corridors, see further (Ricci 2020). |
130 | https://www.neustartimteam.de/ (accessed on 7 July 2022). |
131 | See further Anordnung des Bundesministeriums des Innern, für Bau und Heimat zur Aufnahme besonders schutzbedürftiger Flüchtlinge unterschiedlicher Staatsangehörigkeit oder staatenloser Flüchtlinge aus Ägypten, Äthiopien, Jordanien und aus dem Libanon aus dem Pilotprojekt Neustart im Team (NesT) im Resettlementverfahren gemäß § 23 Absatz 4 des Aufenthaltsgesetzes vom 15.04.2019, §1–2. |
132 | Interview with an international organisation representative, Sweden, 18 February 2021. |
133 | Interview with a state official, Sweden, 19 February 2021; Interview with a representative of a regional authority, Sweden, 2 March 2021; Interview with a state official, Sweden, 26 February 2021. |
134 | Interview with a state official, Sweden, 19 February 2021; Interview with an academic, Sweden, 5 February 2021. |
135 | Interview with a state official, Sweden, 19 February 2021; Interview with an academic, Sweden, 5 February 2021. |
136 | Interview with an academic, Germany, 12 May 2021. On this, see further (Pohlmann and Schwiertz 2020, p. 5; Endres de Oliveira 2020, p. 215). |
137 | See also UNHCR 2019b, p. 23. |
138 | GCR, para 94. |
139 | Interview with an expert, Germany, 23 October 2020. |
140 | Interview with a state official, Germany, 19 October 2020. |
141 | Utredningen om lagliga asylvägar 2017, pp. 74–80. |
142 | Interview with an international organisation representative, Sweden, 18 February 2021. |
143 | Interview with an academic, Sweden, 25 February 2021. |
144 | Interview with a state official, Sweden, 26 February 2021. |
145 | This term is widely understood as policies allowing those asylum seekers whose claims were unsuccessful to stay in the country if they had managed to secure a gainful employment or a vocational training in the case of Germany. See further (Reyhani and Golmohammadi 2021, pp. 13–15). |
146 | Interview with a think-thank representative, Sweden, 7 April 2021. For an early reference to this stance, see the final report of a government inquiry on labour immigration, published in 2006, Arbetskraftsinvandring till Sverige – förslag och konsekvenser, SOU 2006:87, p. 208. See further (Calleman 2015). The author wishes to thank Bernd Parusel for pointing her to this reference. |
147 | Arbetskraftsinvandring till Sverige—förslag och konsekvenser, SOU 2006:87, p. 208. |
148 | Interview with an academic, Sweden, 25 February 2021. |
149 | Interview with an academic, Sweden, 25 February 2021. See further the new inquiry tasked to reintroduce labour market tests and limit the possibility for lane switching. New directives for a new inquiry, Dir 2022:90 En behovsprövad arbetskraftsinvandring: https://www.regeringen.se/49f2d3/contentassets/81013162c8184995a0fe14327bbfad2a/en-behovsprovad-arbetskraftsinvandring-dir.-2022-90.pdf (accessed on 5 October 2022). |
150 | Interview with an expert, Germany, 23 October 2020. |
151 | Interview with an expert, Germany, 23 October 2020; Interview with state official, Germany, 22 January 2021. |
152 | Interview with a state official, Germany, 19 October 2020. |
153 | Interview with an expert, Germany, 23 October 2020. |
154 | Interview with an expert, Germany, 23 October 2020. |
155 | Interview with an expert, Germany, 23 October 2020; Interview with a state official, Germany, 19 October 2020. Refer for instance to Article 10 (3) of the Residence Act. In addition, the lane switching has also been limited through temporal restrictions. |
156 | Interview with an expert, Germany, 20 October 2020. |
157 | Interview with an expert, Germany, 20 October 2020. |
158 | Interview with an employers’ organisation representative, Sweden, 24 February 2021. |
159 | Interview with a state official, Sweden, 19 February 2021. |
160 | Interview with an academic, Germany, 12 May 2021. |
161 | Interview with a state official, Germany, 22 January 2021. |
162 | Interview with a state official, Germany, 22 January 2021; Interview with an academic, Germany, 12 May 2021. Such approach could also give rise to non-discrimination and equal treatment concerns. See further (Tan 2020). |
163 | Interview with an academic, Germany, 12 May 2021. |
164 | See further Anordnung des Bundesministeriums des Innern und für Heimat für das Resettlement-Verfahren 2022 gemäß § 23 Abs. 4 des Aufenthaltsgesetzes (AufenthG) zur Aufnahme besonders schutzbedürftiger Flüchtlinge unterschiedlicher Staatsangehörigkeit oder staatenloser Flüchtlinge aus Ägypten, Jordanien, Kenia und Libanon sowie über den UNHCR Evakuierungsmechanismus in Niger (aus Libyen) vom 24.03.2022, §2 (c) and (d). Such model comes closer to the Australian refugee sponsorship which has been characterised as ‘market-driven outsourcing and privatization of Australia’s refugee resettlement priorities and commitments.’ See further (Hirsch et al. 2019). |
165 | The resettlement programme had a pilot phase between 2012 and 2014. For further details, see https://www.bamf.de/EN/Themen/AsylFluechtlingsschutz/ResettlementRelocation/Resettlement/resettlement-node.html (accessed on 7 July 2022). |
166 | Interview with a state official, Germany, 22 January 2021. |
167 | Interview with a state official, Germany, 22 January 2021. |
168 | Interview with an expert, Germany, 23 October 2020. |
169 | Interview with a state official, Germany, 19 October 2020; Interview with an expert, Germany, 23 October 2020. It needs to be stressed, however, that at the time of this writing, the new German government intends to revise the Skilled Immigration Act in order to liberalise the regime for skilled immigration further. Plans include introduction of a point-based migration path, making the Western Balkans Regulation into a permanent scheme, and lowering the barriers for recognition of foreign qualifications. See further: https://www.bundesregierung.de/resource/blob/974430/1990812/04221173eef9a6720059cc353d759a2b/2021-12-10-koav2021-data.pdf?download=1 p. 33. (accessed on 22 November 2022). |
170 | Interview with a state official, Sweden, 2 March 2021. |
171 | Interview with a state official, Sweden, 2 March 2021. |
172 | Interview with an employers’ organisation representative, Germany, 14 May 2021. |
173 | See further (Zetter 2007). |
174 | It is widely considered that these were the Huguenots fleeing from France as a result of Louis XIV’s 1685 revocation of the Edict of Nantes. |
175 | Convention relating to the Status of Refugees (adopted 28 July 1951, entered into force 22 April 1954) 189 UNTS 137 (Refugee Convention). |
176 | On the links between non-refoulement and the right to seek asylum, see (Hathaway 2005, p. 301; Gil-Bazo 2015). |
177 | For further reasons why refugee law matters for developed countries, see (Hathaway 2007; Gammeltoft-Hansen 2014). |
178 | See for instance (Hamlin 2021, pp. 70–92). |
179 | See for instance para 59 refering to the availability of legal pathways, incluidng for migrants in vulnerable situations and para 61 comitting amongst others to ‘ensuring that migrants do not become liable to criminal prosecution for the fact of having been the object of smuggling’, which is also applicable to refugees. |
180 | On that see also (Long 2013, p. 8). |
181 | Interview with a lawyer, Germany, 10 November 2020. See further (Vankova 2022, p. 104) and (Arendt [1943] 1996). |
182 | On the latter, see (Davitti 2021) and (Davitti and Vankova, forthcoming). |
183 | GCR, para 94. |
184 | Among the priorities of 2019 UNHCR’s Three-Year Strategy on Resettlement and Complementary Pathways, Goal 2: Enabling actions, p. 23. |
185 | Canada’s Economic Mobility Pathways Pilot is a case in point: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/corporate/publications-manuals/operational-bulletins-manuals/permanent-residence/economic-classes/economic-mobility-pilot.html (accessed on 7 July 2022). |
186 | GCR, para 94. |
187 | |
188 | https://www.osce.org/oceea/514723 (accessed on 7 July 2022). |
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. |
© 2022 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Vankova, Z. Refugees as Migrant Workers after the Global Compacts? Can Labour Migration Serve as a Complementary Pathway for People in Need of Protection into Sweden and Germany? Laws 2022, 11, 88. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws11060088
Vankova Z. Refugees as Migrant Workers after the Global Compacts? Can Labour Migration Serve as a Complementary Pathway for People in Need of Protection into Sweden and Germany? Laws. 2022; 11(6):88. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws11060088
Chicago/Turabian StyleVankova, Zvezda. 2022. "Refugees as Migrant Workers after the Global Compacts? Can Labour Migration Serve as a Complementary Pathway for People in Need of Protection into Sweden and Germany?" Laws 11, no. 6: 88. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws11060088
APA StyleVankova, Z. (2022). Refugees as Migrant Workers after the Global Compacts? Can Labour Migration Serve as a Complementary Pathway for People in Need of Protection into Sweden and Germany? Laws, 11(6), 88. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws11060088