CHILDREN ON THE MOVE: A PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW PERSPECTIVE
This study, commissioned by the European Parliament’s Policy Department for Citizens’ Rights and Constitutional Affairs at the request of the JURI Committee, will be presented during a Workshop dedicated to potential and challenges of private international law in the current migratory context. The child’s best interests are a primary consideration under international and EU law. EU migration and private international law frameworks regulate child protection, but in an uncoordinated way: the Dublin III and Brussels IIa Regulations are neither aligned nor applied coherently. This should change. In particular, the rules and mechanisms of Brussels IIa should be used to enhance the protection of migrant children. These include rules on jurisdiction to take protective measures, on applicable law, and on recognition and enforcement of protective measures, and mechanisms for cross-border cooperation between authorities.
Studie
Ekstern forfatter
Sabine Corneloup; Bettina Heiderhoff; Costanza Honorati; Fabienne Jault-Seseke; Thalia Kruger; Caroline Rupp; Hans van Loon; Jinske Verhellen
Om dette dokument
Type af publikation
Nøgleord
- barn
- beskyttelse af børn
- civilret
- civilret
- demografi og befolkning
- EU-medlemsstat
- familie
- flygtning
- fremmedret
- GEOGRAFI
- grænseoverskridende samarbejde
- integration af migranter
- international aftale
- international politik
- international privatret
- international ret
- international sikkerhed
- INTERNATIONALE RELATIONER
- LOVBESTEMMELSER
- migration
- migrationspolitik
- opholdssted
- samarbejdspolitik
- SOCIALE SPØRGSMÅL
- socialt liv
- udenlandsk statsborger
- unge
- ægteskabsret
- økonomisk geografi