Restoring the borderless Schengen area: Mission Impossible?

The Schengen system is in crisis, as it has become increasingly common for member countries to introduce controls at their borders. Can the open borders system be saved? This is the topic of a webinar on 21 November.

Considering the frequent resort to checks at internal borders of Schengen States in recent years, it is increasingly contended that the Schengen system – designed precisely to avoid such border checks – is in crisis. In September 2024, for example, the German government announced to reintroduce checks at all its intra-Schengen borders. Meanwhile, the EU Commission has been on a mission to ‘save Schengen’, and in spring 2024, the Council and the European Parliament agreed on a reform of the Schengen Borders Code alongside a broader package of changes to EU justice and home affairs law.

In a recent SIEPS European Policy Analysis, Steve Peers, Professor of EU Law and Human Rights Law at Royal Holloway University of London, takes stock of the current state of checks at internal borders, the existing legal framework, and the recent reform of the Schengen Borders Code. He also assesses possible impacts of this reform, seeking answers to the question if Schengen can be restored as an area without internal border controls and what could be done to facilitate this process.

At this webinar, Steve Peers will present the results of his research. Jonas Bornemann (University of Groningen) and Anna Kompatscher (University of Flensburg) will contribute comments, insights into their own research as well as further reflections and recommendations in the context of recent developments regarding border checks within the EU. 

Register for the webinar here.

Date
  • 21 November 2024 14:30 - 15:45
Location
  • Live via Zoom
Speakers
  • Steve Peers, Professor of EU Law and Human Rights Law, Royal Holloway University of London
  • Jonas Bornemann, Assistant Professor of European Law, University of Groningen
  • Anna Kompatscher, Research Assistant at the Department of European and International Law, European University Flensburg
Chair
  • Bernd Parusel, Senior researcher, SIEPS