Juridisk Institut

Enhancing and diluting the legal status of subsidiary protection beneficiaries under Union law: – the CJEU judgment in Alo and Osso

Publikation: AndetUdgivelser på nettet - Net-publikationForskningpeer review

Standard

Enhancing and diluting the legal status of subsidiary protection beneficiaries under Union law : – the CJEU judgment in Alo and Osso. / Storgaard, Louise Halleskov.

2016, Blog.

Publikation: AndetUdgivelser på nettet - Net-publikationForskningpeer review

Harvard

APA

CBE

MLA

Vancouver

Author

Bibtex

@misc{f74d99aab6c44873b29622304d5876d5,
title = "Enhancing and diluting the legal status of subsidiary protection beneficiaries under Union law: – the CJEU judgment in Alo and Osso",
abstract = "Is it in accordance with the Qualification Directive (QD) to restrict the freedom of movement within the host country of beneficiaries of subsidiary protection (a form of protection parallel to refugee status) in receipt of social security benefits? This question was addressed by the CJEU in its ruling of 1 March 2015 in the Alo and Osso case. The Court{\textquoteright}s answer and its reasoning is equally interesting, groundbreaking and controversial as it, on the one hand, strengthens the impact of the Geneva Convention (the United Nations Convention on the Status of Refugees) on the QD standards and the substantive content of subsidiary protection while it, on the other hand, creates uncertainty about the applicable non-discrimination standard in such cases",
author = "Storgaard, {Louise Halleskov}",
year = "2016",
month = mar,
day = "9",
language = "English",
type = "Other",

}

RIS

TY - ICOMM

T1 - Enhancing and diluting the legal status of subsidiary protection beneficiaries under Union law

T2 - – the CJEU judgment in Alo and Osso

AU - Storgaard, Louise Halleskov

PY - 2016/3/9

Y1 - 2016/3/9

N2 - Is it in accordance with the Qualification Directive (QD) to restrict the freedom of movement within the host country of beneficiaries of subsidiary protection (a form of protection parallel to refugee status) in receipt of social security benefits? This question was addressed by the CJEU in its ruling of 1 March 2015 in the Alo and Osso case. The Court’s answer and its reasoning is equally interesting, groundbreaking and controversial as it, on the one hand, strengthens the impact of the Geneva Convention (the United Nations Convention on the Status of Refugees) on the QD standards and the substantive content of subsidiary protection while it, on the other hand, creates uncertainty about the applicable non-discrimination standard in such cases

AB - Is it in accordance with the Qualification Directive (QD) to restrict the freedom of movement within the host country of beneficiaries of subsidiary protection (a form of protection parallel to refugee status) in receipt of social security benefits? This question was addressed by the CJEU in its ruling of 1 March 2015 in the Alo and Osso case. The Court’s answer and its reasoning is equally interesting, groundbreaking and controversial as it, on the one hand, strengthens the impact of the Geneva Convention (the United Nations Convention on the Status of Refugees) on the QD standards and the substantive content of subsidiary protection while it, on the other hand, creates uncertainty about the applicable non-discrimination standard in such cases

M3 - Net publication - Internet publication

ER -