Highway to personal happiness Published: 11 November 2015 What happens to refugees on their way to the European Union? Serbian novelist Vladimir Arsenijević has travelled the Balkan route and kept a diary of his journey. By Vladimir Arsenijević
Hungarian refugee policies may lead to massive human rights violations Published: 3 November 2015 Declaring Serbia a safe third country was the first of Hungarian repeated violations of human rights. Hungary turned the humanitarian crisis into a purely political issue. It seems that Europe too will choose to follow the politics of closed doors. By Nóra Köves
Victory of national conservatives in Poland Published: 30 October 2015 After successfully having put its candidate in the presidential seat in May 2015, national conservative party PiS has now managed to win an absolute majority in the parliament. Not a single left-wing party has made it through the elections. It remains to be seen how the electorate will feel represented by this shift to the right in parliament. By Irene Hahn-Fuhr
Canadian Elections 2015: The Power of the "Ethnic Vote" Published: 14 October 2015 The Canadian candidates know that they can't without the support of the immigrant communities. Why do they have such a huge influence? About the Canadian phenomenon of the "visible minorites". By Hannah Winnick
Anti-refugee discourse in Hungarian mainstream politics Published: 5 October 2015 Xenophobia and efforts to turn public opinion against “social welfare migrants” are not a new invention. But the fact that every solution that comes from the EU is ignored – this is something new. By Bálint Jósa
After the EU Summit: Between Appeasement and Campaign Rhetoric Published: 30 September 2015 It remains to be seen whether the majority decision on the redistribution of 120,000 refugees was a clever move. In Central Eastern Europe, the voices against the “dictate of the majority” cannot be ignored. By Eva van de Rakt
In Favour of a Solidary EU Refugee Policy Published: 22 September 2015 A special EU summit of heads of state and government will take place on 23 September. After years of neglect, however, a solidary EU refugee policy cannot be elaborated in summary proceedings and under pressure. A commentary by Eva van de Rakt. By Eva van de Rakt
The Refugee Crisis – Europe’s Humanity and Ability for Political Action on Trial Published: 16 September 2015 For Europe, the current refugee crisis presents a two-fold challenge: Will we uphold our humanitarian values, that is, do we view the refugees as people in need and with a right to a safe haven? And will the EU act as one – or will national selfishness erode European togetherness? By Ralf Fücks
The Refugee Policy of the Visegrád Countries: “No one invited you.” Published: 15 September 2015 After images of Budapest’s Keleti train station illustrating the need for a fast EU assistance programme for refugees: the governments of Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia reaffirmed their vehement “no” to refugee quotas. By Silja Schultheis
A Europe of Refugees Published: 8 September 2015 Europe has always been a continent of refugees und migrations. The debate surrounding how to deal with these challenges has only just begun. An article of our "Berlin Anthology". By Ralf Fücks
Engagement for Refugees in Budapest Published: 7 September 2015 From my hotel room in Budapest at the weekend, I followed the images of Germany’s Willkommenskultur, the country’s policy and manner of welcoming refugees and migrants. They have now been granted permission to travel via Austria to Germany. By Eva van de Rakt
Budapest - Keleti Published: 4 September 2015 For four days now I have been in Budapest, a witness to a drama that I would have considered impossible in an EU capital not long ago. By Eva van de Rakt
Viktor Orbán and the building of a new iron curtain Published: 13 July 2015 In June, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán announced that his government would build a fence along the Serbian-Hungarian border to keep illegal immigrants out of the country. By Babett Oroszi
Embraces Published: 8 July 2015 Frau Meiser doesn't know much about her lodger. Herr Nazim is clean and is neat. He speaks pretty German and his wife is dead. An article of the "Berlin Anthology" about a secret love. By Keto von Waberer
Charité Published: 8 July 2015 Malika and Fatima are waiting for me by the entrance to the women’s clinic at the Charité. The women are very quiet; I try to strike up a conversation. I ask them how they lived in Chechnya... An article of the "Berlin Anthology". By Marina Naprushkina
Spoon Justice: An allegory of ownership Published: 8 July 2015 It does not help to turn the world around. It does not help to shake the Law as hard as one can. Justice refuses to function in a recognizable manner. An article of the "Berlin Anthology". By Hilde Susan Jægtnes
The EU and the Migrant Crisis: Not Much More Than a Point Defense Published: 2 June 2015 At the southern border of “Fortress Europe”, the Mediterranean has turned into a graveyard. The current migrant crisis in Europe is about more than a risk to the EU’s reputation. It strikes at the core of the EU’s founding values. A continuation of its half-hearted response to the migration crisis is out of question. By Charlotte Beck
Hungary’s hypocritical migration policy Published: 29 May 2015 "We’d like to retain Hungary as Hungary", says Victor Orbán in January 2015. Xenophobia is significant in his country. How a multicultural and multi-ethnic society became a mono-ethnic and closed one. By Boldizsár Nagy
Brides for India’s North Published: 18 February 2015 Declining sex ratios due to decades of discrimination against women in certain parts of India have left many men unmarried. An interview about cross-regional marriage migration with Ravinder Kaur. By Caroline Bertram
Just a tiny contribution Published: 9 February 2015 Wei Chen dropped out of school and embarked to work at a construction site in Inner Mongolia. He stayed there for eight years: It was like living in a black-and-white film, he says – no colors, only desert.