Interview with Irina Ivakhnyuk, Doctor of Economy, Member of the Global Migration Policy Associates, RIAC Expert
Labor migrants in Russia face challenges to keep their jobs: passing of Russian language, history and language tests, acquiring expensive permits, paying monthly fees, all with no guarantee they will be able to work. Moreover, studies show Russians increasingly don’t ...
... migration policy up to 2035, we based it on just such an approach. That is, it should be founded on specific concepts of what Russia expects from migration: mitigating its demographic problems, labour market issues, etc. National security considerations ... ... entirely incompatible, since moral and ethical considerations can be built into the pragmatic considerations.
Let us take the migration crisis in Germany as an example. Having taken in refugees, the Germans seemed to have been acting in accordance with ...
... Dublin Regulation, which obliges first-port-of-call countries to deal with the registration of refugees and the arrangement of the necessary infrastructure for them, which entails significant financial expenditure;
4) The lifting of sanctions against Russia, which have caused serious damage to European export industries.
A Country of “Limited Sovereignty”
Dmitry Ofitserov-Belsky:
Multi-Speed Europe: Illusions and Reality
It would make no sense for Brussels to ignore this ultimatum or to attempt ...
... life in Russia, with its highly competitive labour market and fairly disintegrated society, have failed. Immigrants coming to Russia from Central Asia effectively become marginalized: having left a society in which they failed to carve out a suitable socioeconomic ... ... thanks to quickly spreading viral ideas, and rarely crumble if one or two of their leaders are eliminated.
Vladimir Malakhov:
Migration Crisis: International Cooperation and National Strategies
Does all this mean that the chances of a host country preventing ...
... staple of TV news shows, but also provokes lively and often heated discussion on the Internet. The migration issue is becoming particularly dramaticfor our western neighbours, particularly the countries of the European Union. For manyobservers, the migration crisis is a most serious challenge for the ‘European project’, which puts to test the very values that the EU was built upon.
What should the attitude here in Russia be regarding this crisis? Some cannot resist the urge to gloat and once again point to the low efficiency of many European institutions, or even predict the looming end of the European integration. Others would beeager to see in the migration calamity ...