The (B)OrderS Centre of Queen Mary University of London, with the Observatori de Dret Públic (IDP) Barcelona and members of the European Parliament, invite abstract proposals on the notion of 'shared responsibility' as applied to Frontex, the EU Member States, third countries and private entities regarding the implementation of integrated border management.
We welcome, in particular, submissions by early-career researchers (ECRs), including advanced PhD students, to present original work in three distinct fora, with a view to gathering expert feedback, participating in ongoing legal and policy debates, and contributing to a joint publication with established scholars.
Selected submissions will be invited for presentation at:
Selected papers will, in addition, be invited for publication at a Special Issue of a top EU law journal.
The organisers will cover most of the travel and accommodation costs of selected contributors. Further information will be provided at a later stage.
Since its establishment in 2005, the competences, budget, and responsibilities of Frontex have exponentially increased to now include operational and enforcement powers, whose implementation has proven problematic especially in relation to fundamental rights. In fact, Frontex-coordinated missions, particularly in the Aegean Sea and at the EU-Turkey territorial border, have been notorious for the widespread and grave violations they have given rise to and for the opacity with which they have been conducted. Despite Regulation 2019/1896 expressly obliging the Agency to respect fundamental rights ‘in the performance of its tasks’ and making explicit reference to ‘obligations related to access to international protection, in particular the principle of non-refoulement’ (Article 80(1)), Frontex has been accused of having violated them in the implementation of its mandate. This has generated unprecedented scrutiny by civil society, EU bodies, and the media at large.
In reaction to very serious allegations, the European Parliament established, in 2021, a dedicated Frontex Scrutiny Working Group (FSWG). The EU Ombudsman, the EU Court of Auditors, and the EU Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) have also undertaken their own investigations, all concluding to severe deficiencies, including violations of the principle of loyal cooperation, the covering up of illegal pushbacks, and other fundamental rights abuses in the Aegean Sea. The situation has prompted the resignation of the former Executive Director, but there has not been an appraisal of structural concerns, nor has the Agency faced any legal consequences.
A particularly worrying development concerns increasing cooperation with third countries, including at the operational level, which takes place without clarity on the applicable legal framework, effective remedies, or human rights safeguards. Non-binding ‘working arrangements’ are particularly problematic, as they exclude any ex ante democratic control by the European Parliament and impede judicial review by the European Court of Justice of compliance with the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights and primary law at large. ‘Status agreements’ pose similar challenges, providing for the immunity of the Agency before third countries’ jurisdictions and failing to identify any other channels to establish responsibility for possible violations.
Impunity begs questions regarding the extent of Frontex’s obligations as well as the effectiveness of the accountability mechanisms currently in place. Under Article 7 of Regulation 2019/1896, Frontex supposedly shares responsibility with the Member States, which however ‘retain primary responsibility for the management of their sections of the external borders’. Therefore, the exact contours of the notion of ‘shared responsibility’ remain unclear.
The present call for papers aims to gather contributions that shed light on the meaning, scope, and implications of ‘shared responsibility’ from different perspectives, taking international legal standards, EU constitutional norms, general principles, and the Schengen borders, migration and asylum acquis into account, by analysing the competence distribution it implies, the obligations binding on each of the actors concerned (whether the Agency, its own officials, the Member States, third countries, or private entities), and the remedies in place or to be set up, according to Article 47 of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights, should any of the relevant obligations be violated.
Abstract proposals, in English, of 400 words maximum, are invited until 1 March 2023. These should be accompanied by a brief CV of up to 1 page. Submissions should be sent to gesdi.idp@ub.edu.
Abstract proposals should include the following elements:
Proposals on any aspect concerning ‘shared responsibility’ in the context of migration and border control are welcome. Submissions may cover the following possible themes:
Successful applicants will be notified on week commencing 6 March 2023.