1 / 7

The situation of Roma EU citizens moving to and settling in other EU Member States

The situation of Roma EU citizens moving to and settling in other EU Member States. FRA – COE – OSCE Joint International Conference on Roma Migration and Freedom of Movement. The right to freedom of movement and residence.

lavi
Download Presentation

The situation of Roma EU citizens moving to and settling in other EU Member States

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The situation of Roma EU citizens moving to and settling in other EU Member States FRA – COE – OSCE Joint International Conference on RomaMigration and Freedom of Movement

  2. The right to freedom of movement and residence Key to achieving European integration and included in the EU’s Charter of Fundamental Rights (Art. 45) Eurobarometer: 42% believe that EU means first of all ‘freedom to travel, study and work anywhere in the EU’ All EU citizens have this right under certain conditions The 2004 Free Movement Directive enables EU citizens to exercise this right by cutting back administrative formalities and by limiting the scope for refusing entry or terminating the right of residence of EU citizens 2

  3. Background to this report Reports of Roma EU citizens facing problems in settling in other EU countries, e.g. Ponticelli – Italy 2008 incident The FRA commissioned fieldwork research to the ERRC Evidence collected in 5 selected EU MSs through desk research and interviews of Roma, officials and NGOs France, Finland, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom Wide and contrasting range of features reflecting experience of Roma EU citizens in ‘receiving’ countries

  4. Some key researchfindings - 1 - Push factors: unemployment, poverty and racism compounded by economic crisis and violent attacks Pull factors: improved living standards, work and better educational opportunities for children Variety of experiences: Some have found new opportunities and integrated successfully – others had negative experiences of profound immiseration Responses to Roma arrivals vary – frequent negative reactions from politicians and media associated with negative Roma stereotypes, e.g. criminality

  5. Some key researchfindings - 2 - Experiences at Schengen borders broadly positive, but problems experienced when leaving and returning to their own countries, including allegations of corruption Integration efforts targeting Roma EU citizens are rare Incorrect application of the Free Movement Directive, e.g. regarding residence registration conditions, can affect Roma EU citizens’ access to social benefits Some specific policy responses target Roma negatively, e. g. security measures 5

  6. The way forward Transposition of Directive 38  European Commission Application of Directive 38 ‘on the ground’ correctly  integrated, co-operative and coordinated approach across vertical and horizontal levels of governance Development of proactive, inclusion-oriented policies targeting Roma in consultation with civil society Survey data disaggregated by citizenship, gender, age and ethnic origin to monitor inclusion in host societies

  7. Thank you for your attention Publications can be ordered free of charge from www.fra.europa.eu

More Related