Integration at the Border: The Dutch Act on Integration Abroad and International Immigration Law
By (Author) Karin de Vries
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
22nd July 2013
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
342.492082
Hardback
440
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 18mm
794g
A recent development in the immigration policies of several European states is to make the admission of foreign nationals dependent upon criteria relating to their integration. As the practice of 'integration testing abroad' becomes more widespread, this book endeavours to clarify the legal implications which have hitherto remained poorly understood and studied. The book begins by looking at the situation in the Netherlands, which was the first EU Member State to introduce pre-entry integration requirements. It explores the historical and political origins of the Dutch Act on Integration Abroad and explains how, in this national context, integration has become a criterion for the selection of immigrants. It then examines how integration requirements must be evaluated from the point of view of European and international law, including human rights treaties, EU migration directives and association agreements and the law on non-discrimination. The book identifies the legal standards set by these instruments with regard to integration testing abroad and draws conclusions as to the lawfulness of the Dutch approach.
Karin de Vries is Assistant Professor in the Department of Constitutional and Administrative Law at the VU University of Amsterdam.