Migration Law and Policy

Notatki

Migration Law and Policy

Program:  Bachelor of Business and Administration (Specialisations: Business, Finance, Governance)
ECTS:  3
Lecturer:  Barbara Kowalczyk
Email:  barbara.kowalczyk@uwr.edu.pl

Type:  Optional
Level:  Elementary

Lecture
Number of hours:  2h X 6 weeks = 12 hours (1 semester)

Classes
Number of hours:  2h X 4 weeks = 8 hours (1 semester)

Biography of the Professor
Dr Barbara Kowalczyk is an assistant professor at the Faculty of Law, Administration and Economics, the Section of Comparative Public Administration. She obtained master’s degree and doctoral degree in law (specialization: administrative law). Her research and teaching interests concern migration/refugee law and European administrative law. She is the author of books and dozens of articles, i.a. the monograph Polski system azylowy (Polish Asylum System, 2014), co-author of the book Prawo administracyjne Unii Europejskiej (Administrative Law of the European Union, 2016), co-editor of the book Kodeks postępowania administracji Unii Europejskiej (Code of Administrative Proceedings for EU Administration, 2017). She teaches subjects as Comparative Law, European Administrative Law, Migration Law and Policy, International Humanitarian Law, Refugee and Minorities Law, Migration and Asylum Law, Administrative Reforms in the European Countries. In spare time she loves reading novels, going to concerts and walking with her pug. She is passionate about flea markets.

Requirements for passing a course
Essay; it should be: 5-8 pages long; font: Time’s New Roman 12, 1,5 interline; with bibliography consisting of at least 3 positions (books, articles) and list of legal acts and judgements (if are cited). Topic from the list below or topic proposed by student and approved by lecturer. To pass a student needs 50 % (mark 3), for B – 70 % (mark 4), for A – 90 % (mark 5).

Exam questions
1. Overview of national legal instruments in migration field 
2. Public authorities involved in creating migration policy and law 
3. Administrative and judicial authorities involved in application of migration law 
4. Border control 
5. International and European cooperation in the field of border control – the case of FRONTEX 
6. Right to enter the country 
7. Refusal of entry 
8. Right of residence 
9. Visa – notion, types, procedure 
10. Position of family members of residents 
11. Long-term residence 
12. Labour and economic migration 
13. Humanitarian reasons for residence 
14. Asylum and other forms of protection of foreigners 
15. Access to the labour market 
16. Access to self-employed activities 
17. Factors influencing successful integration 
18.Return of illegal staying immigrants 
19. Managing migration through EU partnership with non-EU countries 
20. Trafficking in human beings

Sources
International Migration Outlook , the current edition of the annual OECD http://www.oecd.org/migration/international-migration-outlook

Reports, analyses and commentaries available at:
https://www.iom.int/
https://ec.europa.eu/home-affairs/what-we-do/networks/european_migration_network_en
(the following products: Annual Reports on Migration and Asylum, Studies on relevant topics, Informs, Country Factsheets, Ad-Hoc Queries, Asylum and Migration Glossary)
http://www.asylumineurope.org/reports
http://www.asylumlawdatabase.eu – case-law

Projekt “Zintegrowany Program Rozwoju Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego 2018-2022” współfinansowany ze środków Unii Europejskiej z Europejskiego Funduszu Społecznego

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