Governing and negotiating a transnational legal space - the Greek hotspot Vial
(2018) SOLM12 20181Department of Sociology of Law
- Abstract
- This thesis aims to explore the transnational administrative structure in the Greek hotspots, exemplified in the hotspot Vial on the island Chios. The five Greek hotspots, all located on islands in the East-Aegean, serve as the implementation point of EU Commission`s hotspot approach as well as the EU-Turkey statement. It will be shown, that the Greek hotspots are administrated in a mode of joint implementation by EU institutions, Greece as well as international organizations such as UNHCR and several other non-state actors. Due to the unique administrative structure, this case study will try to analyze how the different actors interact, relate to each other, and share responsibilities and decision-making power. The thesis draws on the... (More)
- This thesis aims to explore the transnational administrative structure in the Greek hotspots, exemplified in the hotspot Vial on the island Chios. The five Greek hotspots, all located on islands in the East-Aegean, serve as the implementation point of EU Commission`s hotspot approach as well as the EU-Turkey statement. It will be shown, that the Greek hotspots are administrated in a mode of joint implementation by EU institutions, Greece as well as international organizations such as UNHCR and several other non-state actors. Due to the unique administrative structure, this case study will try to analyze how the different actors interact, relate to each other, and share responsibilities and decision-making power. The thesis draws on the concepts legal pluralism as well as the political science theories on governance in order to provide theoretical lenses for the analyses and is is based on a two-week ethnographic fieldwork in Chios. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/8964487
- author
- Vogt, Vinzent LU
- supervisor
- organization
- course
- SOLM12 20181
- year
- 2018
- type
- H1 - Master's Degree (One Year)
- subject
- language
- English
- id
- 8964487
- date added to LUP
- 2021-06-14 17:10:35
- date last changed
- 2021-06-14 17:10:35
@misc{8964487, abstract = {{This thesis aims to explore the transnational administrative structure in the Greek hotspots, exemplified in the hotspot Vial on the island Chios. The five Greek hotspots, all located on islands in the East-Aegean, serve as the implementation point of EU Commission`s hotspot approach as well as the EU-Turkey statement. It will be shown, that the Greek hotspots are administrated in a mode of joint implementation by EU institutions, Greece as well as international organizations such as UNHCR and several other non-state actors. Due to the unique administrative structure, this case study will try to analyze how the different actors interact, relate to each other, and share responsibilities and decision-making power. The thesis draws on the concepts legal pluralism as well as the political science theories on governance in order to provide theoretical lenses for the analyses and is is based on a two-week ethnographic fieldwork in Chios.}}, author = {{Vogt, Vinzent}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{Governing and negotiating a transnational legal space - the Greek hotspot Vial}}, year = {{2018}}, }