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Yurii Kuryliuk, Mariia Slyvka y Yaroslav Kushnir
Legal regulation of combating illegal migration in Ukraine and the EU
3. Reorientation of EU policies (methods of their use) to address the
problem of illegal migration. Following the meetings in the framework
of the High-level Migration Dialogues, the EU prepared proposals for
the rst packages for concluding contracts (compacts) with 16 third
countries (Ethiopia, Eritrea, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Somalia,
Sudan, Ghana, Cote d’Ivoire, Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia, Afghanistan,
Bangladesh, and Pakistan). Discussions with Member States in
June 2016 identied ve priority African countries (Ethiopia,
Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, and Mali). An individual interaction plan
was developed for each country. Individual agreements (compacts)
represent a new format of partnerships with third countries, in which
the EU has combined its external and sectoral policies (European
Neighborhood Policy, Development Assistance Policy, Foreign
Trade Policy, Energy Policy, Security Policy, Digital Policy, etc.)
into a single system focused on a common goal - to reduce illegal
migration. Migration policy is an important component of the
Compact (Devisscher, 2011).
The EU plans to strengthen the instruments of this policy in cooperation
with third countries:
• introduce a new “structured resettlement system” based on the
general approach of providing safe and legal entry into the EU for
persons in need of international protection.
• expand channels and opportunities for legal migration to the EU
using visa policy instruments.
• develop training programs for migrants, focused on the needs of
labor markets in the EU; facilitate remittances of migrants to their
home countries.
• to create a single platform for registration of displaced persons
in order to accelerate the delivery of necessary assistance to third
countries and the implementation of resettlement of refugees to the
EU or other countries, etc.
4. Eective multilateralism. The need to develop this area is due to
the fact that migration is a global challenge and therefore requires
a coordinated international approach. In the past few years, the
EU has strengthened cooperation in the eld of asylum policy and
combating illegal migration with international organizations (UN
High Commissioner for Refugees, UN International Organization
for Migration), partner countries within the G-7, G-20 groups. In
particular, the EU actively cooperates with UN structures in the
framework of such programs as the global plan for sharing the
burden of responsibility for the resettlement of Syrian refugees, the
program of assistance in the voluntary return and reintegration of
returned migrants (Provine, 2009).