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Austrian Migration Law
Author(s)
Tatjana Cardona
Andreas Lehner
Language
English
Pages
17
2009/ Vol. 21, No. 1, (71)
Type
Digital edition
5.00 €

Austrian Migration Law

Tatjana Cardona / Andreas Lehner

University of Vienna

Austria’s geographical position in the heart of Europe compels it to play a major role in European migration issues as a destination and transit country. It was a founding member of the Prüm Convention, signed several bilateral treaties dealing with cross-border cooperation in the field of migration and security, and partici­pates in EURODAC. Austria has been a country of immigration for the last twenty years. Part of the Austrian population blames the immigrants for problems on the labour market and for security issues. In 2005 Austrian legislation regarding mi­gration was revised fundamentally by implementing harsher laws and systematis­ing the Austrian law in accordance with EU guidelines. These new laws included in­tegration strategies obligating third-country nationals who receive permanent or long-term settlement permits to fulfil integration agreements. In 2008 a new insti­tution - the Asylum Court - was formed to decide in second and at the same time last instance on asylum matters. This meant a curtailment of the asylum seekers’ right to appeal, for which the new regulation was sharply criticised. However, in­ter­national obligations, such as Arts. 2 and 8 ECHR, compel the Austrian legislator and the Austrian authorities to protect the legal rights of migrants when applying national laws.

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