«Januar 2009»
ManTirOnsTorFreLørSøn
1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Brugernes kalender

RSS feed Informations kalender er brugernes egen. Enhver kan tilføje arrangementer til kalenderen, endda kvit og frit. Blot arrangement er offentligt.

Brug kalenderen til at gøre opmærksom på ting som sker i byen. Hvad end det nu sker om formiddagen og er for hele familien — eller foregår om natten for en snæver kreds af kendere.

Det med småt

Kalenderen er en ny service til brugerne af information.dk. Alle kan bidrage og tilføje arrangementer og det kræves ikke at man opretter sig som bruger.

Kalenderen stilles under brugernes beskyttelse. Det er derfor op til jer at sørge for at indsendte oplysninger er relevante og korrekte. Vi forbeholder os dog retten til at slette indlæg, som kan virke stødende eller henviser til arrangementer som ikke er offentlige.

Abonner på kalenderen (iCal-format)

Control and Consequences: EU and Illegal Immigration from Africa

Hvornår:
11/09/2008 - 14:00


Hvor:
CSS, University of Copenhagen
Østerfarimagsgade 5, 1353 Copenhagen K
København




Web:


The Migration Initiative at University of Copenhagen invites to the seminar Control and Consequences: EU and Illegal Immigration from Africa. Presentations by Hans Lucht: 'West African Illegal Immigration To Europe: A View From Inside The Boats' and Thomas Gammeltoft-Hansen: 'Before the Gates: the Rough Guide to Fortress Europe'.

Everybody is welcome, but registration is nessasary. Registration and more information at www.migration.ku.dk

About the presentations:

Hans Lucht: 'West African Illegal Immigration To Europe: A View From Inside The Boats'.

Based on anthropological fieldwork in Ghana and Italy, this presentation focuses on the background, organisation and human consequences of illegal immigration from a small fishing village in Ghana via Niger and Libya across the Mediterranean Sea to Italy, and how migrant routes may respond to growing political efforts to stop the traffic.

Thomas Gammeltoft-Hansen: 'Before the Gates: the rough guide to Fortress Europe'

One of the most remarkable features of the developing EU asylum and migration framework has been the efforts to reinforce and move migration control outside the physical territory of the European Union itself. Today, both the irregular migrant and the asylum seeker is much more likely to meet European migration control at the airport before departure, in the form of the authorities of transit countries carrying out checks on behalf of European States or in the Mediterranean where European navy vessels are patrolling the high seas. This presentation will focus on the simultaneous externalisation, outsourcing and privatisation of migration control in Europe and what consequences this strategy has from a human rights perspective.

Disscussant: Simon Turner