Attributing Responsibility for Transnational Violations of Migrant Rights
7,5 ECTS
Duration: 26 February – 29 March 2024, On-campus week in Gothenburg, 11–15 March
Location: Hybrid. On-campus week in Gothenburg, 11-15 March 2024. Accommodation in Gothenburg is covered for all doctoral students who are admitted to the course.
Language: English
Study pace: 100%
Course leaders
Dr. Eleni Karageorgiou, Faculty of Law, Lund University
Professor Gregor Noll, Department of Law, Gothenburg University
Course Description
In this course, we track violations of migrant rights, such in cases of pushbacks, refoulement or dismal detention conditions, emerging in the context of such multiparty, transnational cooperation. We focus on forms of cooperation involving the EU, its Member States or both. For Northern states, it leverages power differentials between the North and the South while shifting legal responsibility for rights violation onto Southern partners. Attributing international legal responsibility for violations of migrant rights in a multiparty, transnational context is difficult, and the resulting responsibility gap might be an incentive for migration control by proxy.
This course has three main objectives. First, we shall examine how North-South cooperation increases the risk of violating migrant rights. We will focus on EU cooperation with four countries – Niger, Serbia, Tunisia and Turkey. Second, we shall explore how recent international legal debates on the expansion of responsibility attribution may be leveraged to address legal loopholes and to craft arguments that engage the legal responsibility of states in the North. Third, we will discuss the political logic of responsibility shirking through multiparty, transnational cooperation, and of the countermoves by academic researchers.
Course Lecturers
Eleni Karageorgiou, Faculty of Law, Lund University
Gregor Noll, Department of Law, Gothenburg University
Professor Peo Hansen, Linköping University
Confirmed International Lecturers
B.S. Chimni, Jindal Global University, India (by link)
Gamze Ovacik, Başkent University, Ankara, Turkey/McGill University, Montreal, Canada
How to Apply
Deadline for applications: 14 February 2024
ONLINE APPLICTION FORM
(please note that the course title is stated in a slightly different manner)
Contact
For further information contact the course leaders: Eleni Karageorgiou and Gregor Noll
About the Graduate School in Migration and Integration
- Our Graduate School courses are offered to PhD students.
- 5 weeks of full-time work for 7,5 ECTS. One intensive week at REMESO, Campus Norrköping, Linköping University or at SOCAV & CGM, University of Gothenburg.
- All courses are taught in English.
- Courses are usually examined by a paper assignment.
- Accommodation is provided for free to all PhD students who are admitted to our courses.