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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A seven page paper which considers the policy frameworks and processes in the UK with reference to asylum seekers and refugees, in terms of the ideological constraints which underpin them and the current initiatives extant in the EU with regard to asylum policy. Bibliography lists 7 sources
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JL5_JLasyl.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
asylum policies in the UK, it is necessary to consider not only the history of immigration in the country itself, which has had an impact on the development of policies
relating to asylum seekers and refugees, but also at the way in which European social policies have affected the situation in Britain. The political and economic framework of the EU,
for example, has to strike a balance between establishing equality amongst countries which are starting from positions of economic or social inequality whilst allowing them to retain their considerable cultural
diversity. In effect, the idea is to eventually create a
"level playing field" where no country or group of people is disadvantaged in relation to the others, but this is not meant to also create a homogenous group of "Europeans"
who no longer demonstrate their individual national characteristics. The EU also aims for a much greater flexibility amongst the workforce, with a concomitant breaking down of national boundaries so that
workers are not confined to specific geographical areas. However, greater freedom of movement, especially between countries with considerable economic diversity, is liable to lead to an increase in the number
of economic migrants, and greater problems with both refugees and asylum seekers: this is clearly illustrated, for example, in the current debate over the volume of asylum seekers in Britain,
with right-wing political parties using such migrants as a platform for overtly racist policies whilst other political groups see delays in the assessment and clearance systems as a much greater
problem. Gellaw (2004) makes the point that politicians themselves have failed
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