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The Michigan Guidelines on Refugee Freedom of Movement, or: how explosive existing law can be

31.05.2017

The Michigan Guidelines are a document in which legal scholars summarize the existing international laws of refugee protection on one particular aspect. They are “just” an expert opinion – yet by no means insignificant in that capacity. They are used by courts interpreting the law and thus stand themselves at the threshold of the legal. At any rate the guidelines can frame debates about the legality of state actions in the area of refugee protection and migration control. They summarize the relevant provisions and offer an interpretation, which, although of course not undisputable, is grounded in a broad consensus and anything but eccentric.

The Guidelines appear every two years on different topics, the ones of this year dealing with Refugee Freedom of Movement – possibly the most pressing among the many pressing issues of the field at the moment. Free movement of refugees constitutes a subject area in which current state practices in several cases clash with existing international law: regarding the detention of refugees, restrictions on their mobility in the host state, or regarding measures of deterrence and border security.

Not a one-sided scolding

That said, what the Guidelines are certainly not, is a one-sided scolding of state politics with reference to legal provisions. They constitute an instrument that in the best sense strives for balance, which treats the law as a medium of rationalizing competing interests and viewpoints, and which correspondingly seeks to uncover its underlying normative considerations. In that vein, the Guidelines set out in their introduction by stating that refugees’ freedom of movement is essential for any meaningful protection, and that it both underlies the 1951 Geneva Refugee Convention (GRC) and is supported by the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. At the same time, they stress that this principle of freedom of movement meets other legally recognized interests: to conduct effective border controls, to respect concerns of receiving communities, to tackle human trafficking.

The right to leave every country

The Michigan Guidelines thus aim to clarify how the existing law reconciles competing interests, or to offer an interpretation that strives for such reconciling position. The first aspect of refugee freedom of movement that is discussed is the right to depart. Article 12 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) lays down the right to leave every country, including one’s country of origin. It is in this regard that opposing state interests to restrict free movement have the least weight: Under special circumstances, national security, public health, or the protection of the rights of others can justify restrictions – but only as far as those are provided by law and proportionate to the aim pursued.

The Guidelines specify some cases in which a restriction can accordingly not be regarded as lawful: concerns about the departing individual’s life or safety cannot serve as a justification for preventing his or her departure (para. 6). Neither can the objective to deter human smuggling justify restrictions on the right to departure: potential breaches of another state’s migration laws do not fall under the ordre public exception of Article 12 ICCPR (para. 7). And even where the prevention of human trafficking is at stake, state measures must primarily be directed against the activities of traffickers and not against the individuals seeking to leave the country (para. 8).

Those specifications are important with regard to states which restrict departure directly or indirectly. Eritrea, for instance, invariably requires citizens to obtain an exit visa, which is granted under inconsistent and non-transparent conditions only (cf. a report by the UK Home office). But the observations are also significant regarding the current migration policies of the European Union: Member states, for example in the Malta declaration from February this year, put an “effective control of [the] external border” and stemming of “illegal flows into the EU” first, thereby substantially relying on cooperation with Libya as an important transit country. That Libya is committing massive human rights violations from the detention of migrants up to torture has been described by a report of the United Nations last December. On the basis of the Michigan Guidelines, it can moreover be stressed: The aim of migration control by the European Union does not legitimate to systematically create in the cooperation with Libya incentives for hindering the departure of migrants from there.

Access to protection

Equally explosive for the current orientation of EU migration policies – and those of many other states – are the specifications regarding access to protection. In that vein, the above-mentioned conflict between a state’s interest in controlling access and the freedom of movement of asylum seekers reveals itself the most pertinently: With the arrival on a state’s territory, or from the moment of being under its jurisdiction, migrants hold the full range of rights from international human rights conventions. This has led to states increasingly trying to prevent this first contact, thus to a “schizophrenic attitude” (cf. Hathaway/Gammelthoft-Hansen 2015) of upholding high standards of protection while eagerly obstructing the access to these very rights.

The Michigan Guidelines in that context firstly state that the duty of non-refoulement applies on a state’s territory as well as at its borders (para. 9). One of the potentially most influential findings of the Guidelines is the assessment that a state may not construct or maintain a man-made barrier without providing at the same time for reasonable access to the territory. In simple terms: no wall without gate. That might appear obvious, as it is essential to the normative idea of the refugee – namely that refugees are the exceptional case in which the state does not have full discretion to unilaterally decide about access. A refugee protection that has “entirely succeeded” to shut itself off from all those in need of protection would not be worthy of that name anymore. Yet the seeming obviousness of that statement contrasts starkly with the reality in many places – for instance in Melilla.

The Guidelines promise to be influential in that question exactly because they argue with a decidedness that does not generally mark the debate. For instance, Moria Paz describes how the conflict between universal human rights and states’ commitment to control migration crystallizes into the emergence of border walls, and argues that the adequate legal response is anything but clear. The Michigan Guidelines by contrast draw – quite convincingly – on a “good faith understanding of the duty of non-refoulement”, which, they argue, requires states to provide in a reasonable manner for possibilities to actually claim the protection foreseen in international law.

Liberty and free movement after arrival

Following the various aspects of freedom of movement on an international level, the Guidelines also deal with the question of  freedom of movement once a refugee has arrived in a host state. That concerns the conditions for detention as well as other restrictions on free movement such as the residential obligation in Germany. Here again, the Guidelines depict the normative compromise between freedom of movement and an interest of control: A limitation of free movement in the very earliest moments after arrival is permissible, as far as prescribed by law and proportionate in light of the aim pursued, for instance serving to determine a person’s identity (para. 15). Any detention at a later point has to be justified on an individuated basis and underlies strict requirements for justification (para. 16).

Not only detention but also any other limitation of free movement, be it a direct or indirect result of state action, is subject to conditions (para. 19, 20). This standard applies not just once a claim for protection has been recognized, but equally to asylum seekers waiting for their application to be assessed (para. 18). The territorial restriction of the residence permit foreseen in German Asylum Law (§ 56 AsylG), in its blanket nature, hardly meets these requirements: A limitation to freedom of movement applicable only to asylum seekers contravenes the normative standard of Article 12  ICCPR and Article 26 GRC (para. 19). Also in that regard, the Michigan Guidelines on Refugee Freedom of Movement demonstrate that international refugee law remains significant – and demanding.

 

Dana Schmalz is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Göttingen.

 

A German version of the text is available here.

 

Cite as: Dana Schmalz, “The Michigan Guidelines on Refugee Freedom of Movement, or: how explosive existing law can be”, Völkerrechtsblog, 31 May 2017, doi: 10.17176/20170531-154147.

Author
Dana Schmalz

Dana Schmalz is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law, she holds a scholarship from the Alexander von Humboldt-Foundation. Her work centers on refugee and migration law, human rights, and legal philosophy. In her current research project, she is exploring how population growth has been an object of international legal activities.

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  1. And if I may comment on the English version, too: Thank you for this analysis! The background study by Marjoleine Zieck will appear as an article in the Michigan Journal of International Law later this year, along with the Guidelines.

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