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EN
In this article we analyse innovative integration programmes functioning in Berlin after 2015 for persons living under international protection. We focus on socio-spatial initiatives. Our main hypothesis is that the only effective way to integrate is to live in one’s neighbourhood. Therefore, we present programmes such as BENN or Berlin Mondiale. Our work also reaches out to educational innovations, such as coding schools for international protection beneficiaries. They confirm our hypothesis that effective integration requires cooperation of government and NGOs with the private sector. We identify voluntary participation of persons under international protection and co-creating the image of integration programs. The article is informative and may serve as a basis for further analyses of local integration at city and neighborhoods level.
XX
Ideas of Australia being invaded by a foreign ‘Other’ have been present throughout much of its history and this legacy is still present today. My paper will reveal the red thread of control that runs through Australia’s attitude and policy towards asylum seekers since European arrival. Claims of current restrictions against asylum seekers being mere Islamophobia ignore this history. From the grudging admission of Jewish refugees during times of Nazi oppression to quotas placed on certain nationalities and later draconian punishments for those claiming asylum without a prior visa, control of the ‘Other’ has been a constant theme, with current policies of mandatory detention and off shore processing on far away Pacific islands separating the Australian ‘Self’ from the foreign ‘Other.’
EN
The EURODAC Regulation establishes the database of the fingerprints of asylum seekers. In 2015, the new EURODAC Regulation came in force and some basic concepts that were not in the previous regulation have been changed. The article analyzes the responses to the new EURODAC Regulation from UNHCR and the Commission and the threats that this new regulation is creating. This article aims to find out whether the changes introduced in the new EURODAC will bring potential discrimination concerns and whether asylum seekers are treated as potential criminals and therefore causing stigmatization of those groups of people in society. The article gives an overview of the EURODAC database, fingerprinting and biometric systems, and comparison of old and new EURODAC regulation. The full assessment of the application of the regulation can be done after it has been in force for some time
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