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Legal migration to the EU

Written by Steven Blaakman

Europe is one of the world’s primary destinations for international migrants. In 2024, the region hosted approximately 94 million migrants, the highest number of any region in the world. The biggest share enter via legal means. The EU is experiencing skills shortages, which is partly because of its ageing population, and migrants could play a role in helping to plug them. The EU shares competence on migration and asylum policies with its Member States; EU legislation plays a significant role in managing legal migration, although its impact varies by type of migration.

Nonetheless, data consistently show that most EU legal migration tools are under-used. Blue Cards, an EU initiative to attract highly skilled workers, account for only a fraction of permits issued for employment reasons and few EU countries make significant use of them, which would suggest more work is needed to make them an attractive option. Similarly, the Single Permit, which is a combined work and residency permit, is mostly used by just a handful of EU countries. In recent years, the EU has also launched new initiatives with non-EU countries such as Talent Partnerships and a Talent Pool, but it is too early to say anything about their impact. There is also a directive for seasonal workers, but again only a few EU countries make much use of it.

The EU plays an important role when it comes to asylum by setting common standards, clarifying which EU country is responsible for processing an application, and encouraging solidarity. The European Commission has proposed a Return Regulation to make it easer and faster to return non-EU citizens who were unsuccessful in their bid to obtain asylum. It includes the possibility to create return hubs in non-EU countries, which many Member States are interested in. Temporary protection was used for the first time to help Ukrainians after the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.

Read the complete briefing on ‘Legal migration to the EU‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.

Categories: European Union

Guerre au Proche Orient : les avions américains pourront faire escale en Roumanie

Courrier des Balkans - Thu, 03/12/2026 - 08:13

Bucarest s'implique davantage dans le conflit au Moyen-Orient. La Roumanie a accepté que des appareils de ravitaillement et de surveillance américains fassent escale sur la base militaire de Mihail Kogălniceanu dans le contexte de la guerre mené par les États-Unis et Israël contre l'Iran.

- Le fil de l'Info / , , , ,

The Most Appropriate Response to Falling Birthrates? Embrace Them

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Thu, 03/12/2026 - 08:10

Total Fertility Rate (TFR) is the average number of children that would be born to a woman over her lifetime. Source: World Population Prospects 2022 report from the Population Division of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs

By Nandita Bajaj
ST. PAUL, Minnesota, USA, Mar 12 2026 (IPS)

As birthrates continue to decline in many industrialized countries, anxious governments are running out of schemes to keep women procreating.

In the US, millionaires and billionaires are lining up to donate to Trump’s “baby bonus” savings accounts. Trump accounts give parents $1,000 for all babies born between now and 2028, plus whatever private donors add.

Late last year tech billionaires Michael and Susan Dell donated $6.25 billion to them. The accounts are part of Trump’s far-Right pronatalist agenda, and also part of the broader trend of governments using heavy-handed pronatalist policies, ranging from bribes to outright coercion, to convince women to have more babies and shore up the supply of future workers, taxpayers, and soldiers.

These interventions are notoriously ineffective. A recent Heritage Foundation report recommended using economic incentives to convince American women to have more babies, “with preferences for larger-than-average [families],” while shaming those who choose to have fewer or no children.

A family in South Korea, which has the lowest Total Fertility Rate in the world (0.8).

But it also admitted, “Other nations have tried to reverse declining birthrates through financially generous family policies, none has succeeded. Government spending alone does not ensure demographic success.”

Nor can such policies achieve what Heritage calls “success.” Trying to raise birthrates by incentivizing women to have babies not only undermines hard-won reproductive rights, it’s a waste of money.

Such spending is not a priority for U.S. taxpayers, as most Americans do not see falling birth rates as a crisis. Instead, they overwhelmingly want the government to address untenably high child care costs. But a one-time Trump account infusion makes no dent in high costs of raising children and other barriers to motherhood.

Just as recent cuts to SNAP and Medicaid disproportionately affect marginalized women and children, Trump accounts benefit least those who need help most. By the Administration’s own calculations, the accounts will benefit wealthy parents disproportionately.

This shouldn’t be surprising. Trump accounts and other pronatalist policies aren’t really about empowerment or saving families or supporting children. They are a bid to make more white Americans, part of a larger nativist program which includes cracking down on immigration from African and Muslim countries, detaining and deporting non-white people in huge numbers, and even abandoning former U.S. efforts to fight child exploitation and trafficking.

These policies overtly stoke panic about falling birthrates, and tacitly uphold the white supremacist “great replacement” conspiracy theory.

That makes support for pronatalism from some progressives especially disturbing. Even if their intent is not nativist, advocating policies that push women to have more children is anti-feminist and fundamentally at odds with reproductive agency.

And even when such policies intend to serve feminist goals–for example Finland’s generous parental leave and child and health care—they fail to raise birthrates. That’s because the biggest factor in childbearing decisions isn’t affordability; it’s empowerment.

Nobel prizewinning economic historian Claudia Goldin has shown high birthrates are no longer tied to economic prosperity, as women increasingly choose education and careers over traditional family roles. In fact, she found an inverse relationship between per capita income and fertility. “Wherever you get increased agency,” she said, “you get reduction in the birth rate.”

Another study across 136 countries confirms this: whenever women achieve reproductive agency, birthrates decline, whether the economy is growing or shrinking.

But hundreds of millions of women and girls are denied this agency. Over 640 million alive today were child brides (including in the US). Over 220 million have an unmet need for contraception. More than half of pregnancies are unintended—121 million annually. Cuts in USAID and other aid programs make the situation more dire.

Despite birthrates declining in many countries, global population is going up, projected to swell by 2 billion to 10.4 billion by the 2080s, with vast ecological and social consequences. Extreme climate events are expected to kill more than a billion people and displace up to 3 billion this century, most in countries where women and girls are disempowered and fertility rates remain high. Pronatalism will only make ecological and social crises worse.

We need new policy thinking that recognizes this and embraces the many advantages of declining fertility and less growth. As fertility rates fall, female labor participation will increase and gender pay gaps will narrow.

As median age rises, changing demographics could enable policy shifts that improve wages and conditions for workers and extend job opportunity to billions on the sidelines who want work but don’t have it.

There is no lack of good ideas, from economic models that center wellbeing and rethink growth to radical ecological democracy. Exploring them requires getting off the endless growth treadmill that enriches elites at the expense of the rest of us. We must stop treating women like reproductive vessels for making more people to serve the economy, and start reshaping our economies to serve more people and the planet.

Nandita Bajaj is executive director of the NGO Population Balance, senior lecturer at Antioch University, and producer and host of the podcasts OVERSHOOT and Beyond Pronatalism. Her research and advocacy work focuses on addressing the combined impacts of pronatalism and human expansionism on reproductive and ecological justice.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Categories: Africa, European Union

BESZÉLGETÉS LÁSZLÓ FERENC HELIKOPTERPILÓTÁVAL, 1. RÉSZ

Air Base Blog - Thu, 03/12/2026 - 07:54

László Ferenc mezőgazdasági és légimentő pilóta néhány évvel ezelőtt ment nyugdíjba, lezárva egy igencsak gazdag pályafutást. Közel ötven év levegőben szerzett élményeit nem könnyű röviden összefoglalni – de azért megpróbáltuk. László Ferenccel Kaposvár melletti otthonában beszélgettem.

A történet valamikor a hatvanas években kezdődött, egy Rubik-féle vitorlázógép, az R-15 Koma fedélzetén. Ilyen kétüléses géppel mutatta meg a repülés élményét az akkor még csak három éves László Ferencnek az édesapja. Az apa – aki tudta, hogy aggódó felesége nagyon félti a fiukat – a hazavezető úton többször is kérte, hogy a repülés maradjon kettőjük között. Hazaérve a kisfiú első mondata az élmény hatására természetesen az volt, hogy „Anyu, láttam fentről az erdőt!” Aznap nem csak az erdőt látta fentről, hanem életében először azt is, hogy néz ki valaki infarktus közeli állapotban...

[...] Bővebben!


"Coupez une tête et d'autres repoussent" : comment les dirigeants iraniens ont bâti un système pour se maintenir au pouvoir

BBC Afrique - Thu, 03/12/2026 - 07:04
La structure "semblable à une hydre" de l'Iran lui a permis de résister à des chocs répétés et il est peu probable qu'elle soit facilement renversée, selon les experts.

Joint press statement by President of the European Council, António Costa, and President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev

European Council - Thu, 03/12/2026 - 04:59
On 11 March 2026, the President of the European Council, António Costa and the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev met in Baku, the Republic of Azerbaijan.

Joint press statement by President of the European Council, António Costa, and President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev

Europäischer Rat (Nachrichten) - Thu, 03/12/2026 - 04:59
On 11 March 2026, the President of the European Council, António Costa and the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev met in Baku, the Republic of Azerbaijan.

Joint press statement by President of the European Council, António Costa, and President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev

Európai Tanács hírei - Thu, 03/12/2026 - 04:59
On 11 March 2026, the President of the European Council, António Costa and the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev met in Baku, the Republic of Azerbaijan.

Kurz nach Brandserie in den Nachbargemeinden: Stöckli in Zuchwil SO brennt lichterloh

Blick.ch - Thu, 03/12/2026 - 03:12
Ein Stöckli in Zuchwil SO stand in der Nacht auf Donnerstag in Vollbrand. Erst im Januar hatte die Polizei einen mutmasslichen Feuerteufel verhaftet, der mehrere Brände in der Gegend gelegt haben soll.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Policies for accelerating sustainability transitions: bridging insights from transition studies and policy studies

Pressing environmental and societal challenges, such as the climate crisis and social inequality, demand policy interventions to steer and accelerate sustainability transitions. This chapter highlights four key intervention areas: providing direction to transitions (directionality), fostering innovation (niche support), phasing out unsustainable practices (regime destabilisation), and coordinating transition processes (coordination). We outline their theoretical rationale in transition studies and offer interdisciplinary insights from policy research. Based on a comprehensive literature review, we present 15 concrete policy interventions to transform production and consumption systems. Evaluating these interventions with empirical findings from leading transition journals, we highlight research opportunities at the intersection of public policy and sustainability transitions. Given the resistance and contestation around transformational policies, we aim to foster interdisciplinary exchange on how to accelerate sustainability transitions.

Policies for accelerating sustainability transitions: bridging insights from transition studies and policy studies

Pressing environmental and societal challenges, such as the climate crisis and social inequality, demand policy interventions to steer and accelerate sustainability transitions. This chapter highlights four key intervention areas: providing direction to transitions (directionality), fostering innovation (niche support), phasing out unsustainable practices (regime destabilisation), and coordinating transition processes (coordination). We outline their theoretical rationale in transition studies and offer interdisciplinary insights from policy research. Based on a comprehensive literature review, we present 15 concrete policy interventions to transform production and consumption systems. Evaluating these interventions with empirical findings from leading transition journals, we highlight research opportunities at the intersection of public policy and sustainability transitions. Given the resistance and contestation around transformational policies, we aim to foster interdisciplinary exchange on how to accelerate sustainability transitions.

Policies for accelerating sustainability transitions: bridging insights from transition studies and policy studies

Pressing environmental and societal challenges, such as the climate crisis and social inequality, demand policy interventions to steer and accelerate sustainability transitions. This chapter highlights four key intervention areas: providing direction to transitions (directionality), fostering innovation (niche support), phasing out unsustainable practices (regime destabilisation), and coordinating transition processes (coordination). We outline their theoretical rationale in transition studies and offer interdisciplinary insights from policy research. Based on a comprehensive literature review, we present 15 concrete policy interventions to transform production and consumption systems. Evaluating these interventions with empirical findings from leading transition journals, we highlight research opportunities at the intersection of public policy and sustainability transitions. Given the resistance and contestation around transformational policies, we aim to foster interdisciplinary exchange on how to accelerate sustainability transitions.

Why Namibia's green energy dream could be a red flag for penguins

BBC Africa - Thu, 03/12/2026 - 01:04
A near pristine desert and coastal wilderness in Namibia could soon host a huge hydrogen production facility.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Why Namibia's green energy dream could be a red flag for penguins

BBC Africa - Thu, 03/12/2026 - 01:04
A near pristine desert and coastal wilderness in Namibia could soon host a huge hydrogen production facility.
Categories: Africa, European Union

Why Namibia's green energy dream could be a red flag for penguins

BBC Africa - Thu, 03/12/2026 - 01:04
A near pristine desert and coastal wilderness in Namibia could soon host a huge hydrogen production facility.

Real-Gala gegen ManCity: Valverde-Show lässt verletzten Mbappé auf Tribüne ausrasten

Blick.ch - Thu, 03/12/2026 - 00:35
Federico Valverde (27) sorgt mit seinem Hattrick gegen Manchester City nicht nur bei seinen Real-Teamkollegen für Begeisterung. Auch die spanische Presse adelt den Mittelfeldspieler.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Zum Zuhören verdammt: So viel Zeit verplempert der Bundesrat im Parlament

Blick.ch - Thu, 03/12/2026 - 00:07
Berät das Parlament Volksinitiativen, ist der zuständige Bundesrat zum untätigen Zuhören verdammt – Stunde um Stunde. Nun hat der Bund erstmals die Liste der Untätigkeit veröffentlicht. «Sie hätten wirklich Wichtigeres zu tun», sagt FDP-Nationalrätin Maja Riniker.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Preisgekrönter Podcast: Wir schicken dich zur Live-Show von «Zivadiliring»

Blick.ch - Thu, 03/12/2026 - 00:01
Das Podcast-Trio Maja Zivadinovic, Gülsha Adilji und Yvonne Eisenring geht ab April in Basel, Zürich und Bern auf Tournee. Die Show mit viel Humor und radikaler Ehrlichkeit verspricht unvergessliche Live-Momente. Gewinne bei Blick Tickets für den Erfolgs-Podcast.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Formel-1-Star sorgt in der «World of Racing» in Luzern für Gesprächsstoff: Sebastian Vettel über Comeback und die neue Saison

Blick.ch - Thu, 03/12/2026 - 00:01
Auch 2026 lockt die «Red Bull World of Racing» mit spektakulären Erlebnissen. In der abwechslungsreichen Ausstellung im Verkehrshaus fühlen sich selbst Formel-1-Legenden wie Sebastian Vettel wohl. Er schwärmt bei einem Besuch von der Entwicklung im Motorsport.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

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