Global Compacts and the EU Pact on Asylum and Migration: A Clash Between the Talk and the Walk


Ovacık, G., & Crépeau, F. (2025, mars)
MDPI Journal List/Law
Vol 14/ Num.: 2

 
 

Abstract

The current global mobility paradigm suffers from a great paradox. The illegality of human mobility is manufactured through restrictive migration and asylum policies, which claim to address the supposed challenges of human mobility, such as erosion of border security, burden on the labour market, and social disharmony. On the contrary, they reinforce them, resulting in strengthened anti-migrant sentiments at the domestic level. The contradiction is that the more restrictive migration policies are and the more they are directed at containment of human mobility, the more counterproductive they become. The fact that the policies of the destination states are shaped through the votes of their citizens, and migrants are never part of the conversation which would bring the reality check of their lived lives, is a defining factor that enables state policies preventing and deterring access to territory and containing asylum seekers elsewhere. We demonstrate that this is the dynamic behind the new EU Pact on Migration and Asylum, as it thickens the European borders even further through harsher border procedures and expanded externalisation of migration control. Whereas the Global Compacts represent the paradigm of facilitated mobility and are a significant step in the right direction for moving beyond the defined paradox, the EU Pact represents the containment paradigm and showcases that the tension between the commitments and the actions of states is far from being resolved. Through an assessment of the EU Pact on Migration and Asylum’s alignment with the Global Compacts, this article scrutinizes the trajectory of the global mobility paradigm since the adoption of the Global Compacts.
Keywords: 

EU Pact on Migration and Asylum; Global Compact on Refugees; Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration; deterrence; containment; policy paradigm

Membres et équipe SHERPA

François Crépeau

Directeur, McGill Centre for Human Rights and Legal Pluralism Rapporteur spécial des Nations Unies pour les droits de l’homme des migrants de 2011 à 2017