German Inefficiency: Berlin’s refugee services are becoming a bureaucratic nightmare Published: 7 January 2016 While Germans are generally well-known for their efficiency, the situation at the asylum registration center LaGeSo (Landesamt für Gesundheit und Soziales) in Berlin is anything but. By Kavitha Surana and Thalia Beaty
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
Europe and Its Refugees Published: 8 September 2015 After Danish Jews fled to their neutral neighbours in 1943 and Sweden agreed to offer temporary refuge to some thirty thousand survivors of the Nazi concentration camps, a country deeply averse to foreigners transformed. So can Europe today. An article of the "Berlin Anthology". By Göran Rosenberg
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
The ECJ recognises homosexuality as grounds for asylum Published: 11 March 2014 On November 7, 2013, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) decided that homosexual asylum seekers be granted asylum in EU Member States. An important judgment that is, however, a drop in the ocean in the light of the EU’s policy of closure with regard to asylum and refugee policy. By Caroline Ausserer