Country Profile


GAPs Country Profile: Greece / Blog Posts

 

Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes? Managing Immigrant and Refugees’ Biometric Data in the Age of Artificial Intelligence.

by: Angelo Tramountanis | National Centre for Social Research, EKKE

In April 2024, the Hellenic Data Protection Authority issued a fine of €175,000 to the Greek Ministry of Migration and Asylum, due to non-compliance with data protection regulations concerning the operation of new migrant detention centers on the Aegean islands. This marks the highest penalty ever placed on a Greek public body. Specifically, the violations were linked to provisions governing two surveillance systems implemented in the centres titled "Centaur" and "Hyperion”. This fine yet again brings to prominence the ongoing debate surrounding the implications from implementing new digital technologies, particularly Artificial Intelligence (AI)…

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Materials matter! Preliminary Research Findings on Return Migration Infrastructures in Greece.

by: George Kandylis, Eva Papatzani, Panos Hatziprokopiou, | National Centre for Social Research, EKKE

In early September 2023, the research team of the National Centre for Social Research (EKKE) started fieldwork in Greece within the scope of the GAPs project (entitled “De-centring the Study of Migrant Returns and Readmission Policies in Europe and Beyond”), particularly focusing on Return Migration Infrastructures (RMIs). Research on RMIs aims to bring to the fore how return migration governance is put into practice, by focusing on: a) the actors involved in the operation of returns, their relationships and networks, b) their everyday practices and the different steps constituting the return process, and c) the materials and technologies that shape (either facilitate or undermine) the ways in which returns take place on the ground…

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Image: Aegean Guernica, 2015, by Jovcho Savov.

Thinking the Pylos Shipwreck: Europe’s “shield” or Europe’s graveyard

by: Eva Papatzani, Panos Hatziprokopiou, Penny Koutrolikou | National Centre for Social Research, EKKE

The first months of the implementation of the GAPs project in Greece coincided with the Pylos shipwreck. On the 14th June 2023, the flagless vessel named “Adriana” sank off the coast of Pylos, in Southwestern Greece in an attempt to cross the Mediterranean Sea and reach Italy. As Eastern Mediterranean sea routes are more tightly controlled, other, more dangerous routes open up in order to avoid arrest and/or deportations and pushbacks. The ship departed from Libya carrying around 750 people, mainly from Pakistan, Egypt, and Syria, as well as Palestine and Afghanistan. It capsized 87 kilometers off the Greek coast, in international waters but, particularly, in the Greek Search and Rescue (SAR) zone. From all its passengers, only 104 people, exclusively men, survived, while the bodies of many, especially of those who found shelter at the bottom of the ship (mainly women and children) will probably never be found…

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GAPs Country Profile: Greece / Publications

 

This working paper explores how the irregularisation of migration is produced and reproduced through the workings of the legal and institutional framework of migration and asylum in the case of Greece. Irregularity is not considered here only as a legal status (or the absence of it),  but as the outcome of policies, institutional arrangements, and the formal and informal practices of various actors within the wider political and socio-economic context. We thus discuss irregularisation as a process rather than a state of things, one in which many (also ‘regular’) people may be involved, in sequences of (ir)regular statuses. Irregularisation entails a sum of diverse informal or ‘irregular’ or ‘illegal’ practices that also people with ‘regular’ statuses develop in order to navigate in the otherwise hostile migration and asylum regime. The paper examines in short how irregularisation has emerged through the immigration system over the last three decades including the complicated pathways to regularisation procedures, and the police practices…


The present Country Dossier discusses the legal and institutional framework governing returns in Greece and highlights a number of gaps in terms of legal certainty, consistency and guaranties. The legal framework is characterised by ambiguity, mainly due to preceding legal arrangements on ‘administrative expulsion’ that remain in force. Particularly, Law 3907/2011 which transposed the Return Directive 2008/115/EC into the Greek legislation and determines the operation of returns, coexists with Law 3386/2005 concerning the administrative expulsions of Third Country Nationals. An additional complexity also arises as regards the multiple national, supranational and international actors involved in returns.

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