Integrazione o ReImmigrazione

Italy’s New Immigration Model: Integration, Complementary Protection and the Right to Remain


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Italy’s New Immigration Model: Integration, Complementary Protection and the Right to Remain Welcome to a new episode of the podcast “Integration or ReImmigration”. My name is Fabio Loscerbo, attorney at law. Italy is currently discussing a major immigration reform known as the Security Bill 1869. Most international observers are focusing on border controls, detention measures and deportation policies. But a much deeper legal transformation is taking place inside the Italian immigration system. At the center of this transformation is a concept called “complementary protection”. For an American audience, this concept may appear unusual because it does not perfectly correspond either to traditional asylum protection or to discretionary humanitarian programs. Italy is gradually building a legal model in which the right to remain in the country depends not only on danger in the migrant’s country of origin, but also on the level of integration achieved inside Italian society. This means that factors such as stable employment, regular income, housing stability, language knowledge, family relationships, social integration and respect for the law are becoming increasingly important in determining whether a migrant may legally remain in Italy. Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which protects private and family life, is becoming one of the central legal tools in this process. Italian courts and institutions are increasingly evaluating not only what risks a migrant may face if removed, but also what social and family life would be destroyed through removal. This is where the paradigm “Integration or ReImmigration” emerges. The idea is not unrestricted immigration, but neither is it indiscriminate mass deportation. Italy appears to be moving toward a selective permanence model. Migrants who genuinely integrate into the national community progressively strengthen their legal position through complementary protection. Those who fail to integrate and develop no meaningful ties increasingly fall into the area of return and removal policies. This represents a major shift in European immigration law. The system is gradually evolving from a framework centered primarily on entry into the territory toward one increasingly based on integration within the host society. Complementary protection is becoming the legal mechanism through which this transformation is taking place. My name is Fabio Loscerbo and this was a new episode of the podcast “Integration or ReImmigration”.

Questo episodio include contenuti generati dall’IA.
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Integrazione o ReImmigrazioneBy Fabio Loscerbo