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  <titleInfo>
    <title>Relationalizing the EU’s Fundamental Rights Responsibility</title>
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    <namePart>De Coninck, Joyce</namePart>
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    <publisher>Verfassungsblog</publisher>
    <dateIssued>2024-07-31</dateIssued>
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  <abstract displayLabel="Summary">Human rights law traditionally governs a three-part relationship which connects the individual, the state, and its territory. The design of the EU’s Integrated Border Management (IBM) governance model eschews the applicability and enforceability of international and European human (fundamental) rights law by significantly reconfiguring the relationship between each of these three prongs. This contribution maps how these three traditional triggers for the applicability of human rights law are increasingly evaded in EU IBM policies, the responses to these evasion techniques and how a relational turn in the determination of human rights responsibility may be inevitable. </abstract>
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  <note type="statement of responsibility">De Coninck, Joyce</note>
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    <topic>Human Rights</topic>
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  <subject>
    <topic>Integrated Border Management</topic>
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  <subject>
    <topic>State Responsibility</topic>
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  <subject>
    <topic>international human right</topic>
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    <identifier type="issn">2366-7044</identifier>
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  <identifier type="doi">10.59704/1fa508dd65167252</identifier>
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