Is the rise in internal border controls ending the EU dream? (www.dw.com)
from MicroWave@lemmy.world to world@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 11:27
https://lemmy.world/post/23160964

Summary

The Schengen Area, a cornerstone of EU integration allowing free movement across 27 countries, faces increasing strain as internal border checks become widespread.

In 2024, Germany expanded controls to all its land borders, citing rising migration, with other nations like France and the Netherlands maintaining or reintroducing checks.

Critics argue these measures, intended as temporary exceptions, risk undermining Schengen’s principles.

Despite plans to welcome Bulgaria and Romania as full Schengen members in 2025, ongoing debates over migration policy and uneven burden-sharing challenge the vision of a borderless Europe.

#world

threaded - newest

itsonlygeorge@reddthat.com on 15 Dec 21:12 next collapse

The only way to fight migration is to improve the conditions in the countries where people are leaving. If life is getting better in their own country, they will stay there as opposed to tracking to other countries in hope of a better life.

ms_lane@lemmy.world on 16 Dec 09:21 collapse

Didn’t Germany spend the better part of a decade chastising Poland for border controls relating to migration?

Why is it different for Germany?

P1nkman@lemmy.world on 17 Dec 16:47 collapse

Why? Because Germany is not the same country as Poland. Duh 🙄

Tap for spoiler

/s