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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs Center for European Studie
 s presents&nbsp\;The Architecture of Failure: The Institutional Origins of
  the Refugee Crisis A talk by&nbsp\;Sara Wallace Goodman\, Associate Profe
 ssor\, Department of Political Science\,\nUniversity of California\, Irvin
 e&nbsp\;Europe’s Refugee\nCrisis—where over 1.2 million first time asylum 
 claims were submitted in 2015\nalone—was defined not only by unprecedented
  volume but by uncharacteristic lack\nof coordination and noncompliance to
  EU asylum rules. How could a series of\nCommunity policies fail to quell 
 the very problems that integration and\ncoordination are designed to overc
 ome\, namely competitive state behavior like\nfree-riding and non-complian
 ce? In other words\, what was it about asylum policy\nand the refugee cris
 is that facilitated not only a default to national\nsolutions but a defian
 ce of EU authority? Taking an historical institutional\napproach to the ar
 chitecture of common asylum policy (looking at origins\,\nsequencing\, and
  policy transfer)\, I illustrate how common asylum\npolicy was never defin
 ed by coordination and solidarity\, nor did these goals\nevolve over time.
  This analysis problematizes the current EU policy status quo\n(“different
 ial integration”) and considers what limited coordination in areas\nof peo
 ple-hood portend for EU political development and authority.&nbsp\;Sponsor
 ing Departments: Center for European Studies\, Moynihan Institute of Globa
 l Affairs\, Department of Political Science&nbsp\;For more information\, c
 ontact Havva Karakas-Keles\, hkarakas@syr.edu&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; 
DTEND:20181108T183000Z
DTSTAMP:20260312T170624Z
DTSTART:20181108T170000Z
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SUMMARY:The Architecture of Failure: The Institutional Origins of the Refug
 ee Crisis 
UID:RFCALITEM639089175845278362
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs </p><p
 >Center for European Studies </p><p>presents&nbsp\;</p><p><strong>The Arch
 itecture of Failure: The Institutional Origins of the Refugee Crisis </str
 ong></p><p>A talk by&nbsp\;Sara Wallace Goodman\, Associate Professor\, De
 partment of Political Science\,\nUniversity of California\, Irvine&nbsp\;<
 /p><p>Europe’s Refugee\nCrisis—where over 1.2 million first time asylum cl
 aims were submitted in 2015\nalone—was defined not only by unprecedented v
 olume but by uncharacteristic lack\nof coordination and noncompliance to E
 U asylum rules. How could a series of\nCommunity policies fail to quell th
 e very problems that integration and\ncoordination are designed to overcom
 e\, namely competitive state behavior like\nfree-riding and non-compliance
 ? In other words\, what was it about asylum policy\nand the refugee crisis
  that facilitated not only a default to national\nsolutions but a defiance
  of EU authority? Taking an historical institutional\napproach to the arch
 itecture of common asylum policy (looking at <i>origins\,\nsequencing\, </
 i>and <i>policy transfer)</i>\, I illustrate how common asylum\npolicy was
  never defined by coordination and solidarity\, nor did these goals\nevolv
 e over time. This analysis problematizes the current EU policy status quo\
 n(“differential integration”) and considers what limited coordination in a
 reas\nof people-hood portend for EU political development and authority.&n
 bsp\;</p><p>Sponsoring Departments: Center for European Studies\, Moynihan
  Institute of Global Affairs\, Department of Political Science&nbsp\;</p><
 p>For more information\, contact Havva Karakas-Keles\, <a href="mailto:hka
 rakas@syr.edu">hkarakas@syr.edu</a>&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; </p>
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