This article aims to underline how the Western Balkans are an area of fundamental geo-strategic interest for the security inside and outside Europe. Its geostrategic importance was even more evident when, since 2015, the Western Balkans have been crossed by one of the most impressive migratory routes to Europe, the so-called “Balkan route”, showing the political instability of both the region and the EU. The massive flow of asylum seekers led the EU institutions to recognize in April 2015 the exceptional nature of the situation, calling unsuccessfully for the adoption of solidarity measures to overcome the catastrophic humanitarian situation in the so-called “frontline Member States”. In this framework, the article intends to briefly investigate the limits of the existing regulatory framework, which was unable to offer an adequate response to such a situation, as well as of the proposals of the EU Pact on migration of asylum and migration in order to find a solution to a crisis that is not only a migration crisis, but a deeper crisis of identity that, with specific reference to some Member States, belonging to the so-called Visegrad Group, is struggling to balance the coexisting interests of the EU legal system.
The Migrant Crisis Along the Balkan Routes: Still a Lot to Do
Teresa Russo
2022-01-01
Abstract
This article aims to underline how the Western Balkans are an area of fundamental geo-strategic interest for the security inside and outside Europe. Its geostrategic importance was even more evident when, since 2015, the Western Balkans have been crossed by one of the most impressive migratory routes to Europe, the so-called “Balkan route”, showing the political instability of both the region and the EU. The massive flow of asylum seekers led the EU institutions to recognize in April 2015 the exceptional nature of the situation, calling unsuccessfully for the adoption of solidarity measures to overcome the catastrophic humanitarian situation in the so-called “frontline Member States”. In this framework, the article intends to briefly investigate the limits of the existing regulatory framework, which was unable to offer an adequate response to such a situation, as well as of the proposals of the EU Pact on migration of asylum and migration in order to find a solution to a crisis that is not only a migration crisis, but a deeper crisis of identity that, with specific reference to some Member States, belonging to the so-called Visegrad Group, is struggling to balance the coexisting interests of the EU legal system.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.