1st Edition

Inside Asylum Appeals Access, Participation and Procedure in Europe

    338 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Appeals are a crucial part of Europe’s asylum system, but remain poorly understood. Building on insights and perspectives from legal geography and socio-legal studies, this book shines a light on what takes place during asylum appeals and puts forward suggestions for improving their fairness and accessibility. Drawing on hundreds of ethnographic observations of appeal hearings, as well as research interviews, the authors paint a detailed picture of the limitations of refugee protection available through asylum appeals. Refugee law can appear dependable and reliable in policy documents and legal texts. However, this work offers the unique insight that, in reality, myriad social, political, psychological, linguistic, contextual and economic factors interfere with and frequently confound the protection that refugee law promises during its concrete enactment. Drawing on evidence from Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Greece, Italy and the United Kingdom, the book equips readers with a clear sense of the fragility of legal protection for people forced to migrate to Europe. The book will appeal to scholars of migration studies, legal studies, legal geography and the social sciences generally, as well as practitioners in asylum law throughout Europe and beyond.

    Acknowledgements;  Table of Figures;  List of Acronyms;  1. Introduction;  2. What are asylum appeals?;  3. Approaching Asylum Appeals;  4. Before the Hearing: Waiting, Preparation and Anticipation;  5. Arriving at Court: First Impressions, Orientation and the Fragility of Trust;  6. Assembling Appeals: Material Perspectives on Gathering Evidence and People;  Policy and Practice Compendium 1;  7. The Politics of Speed: Adjudication and Participation Under Time Pressure;  8. Barriers to Communication in Asylum Appeals: Interpretation, Disclosure and Distractions;  Policy and Practice Compendium 2;  9. Mistakes and Incompetence;  10. Judicial Questioning During Hearings;  11. Judicial Styles;  Policy and Practice Compendium 3;  12. Conclusion

    Biography

    Nick Gill is a Professor of Human Geography at the University of Exeter, UK, and Principle Investigator of the ASYFAIR project.

    Nicole Hoellerer is a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the University of Bristol.

    Jessica Hambly is a Senior Lecturer at the Australian National University College of Law.

    Daniel Fisher is a Research Associate at the University of Glasgow’s Centre for Public Policy.