Guaranteed minimum income for all: A case of the EU and EEA

For the European Union, the question and the Future of Social Security Law, comes at critical moment: the natural tendency for creation new barriers that is inherent for each national welfare state as an international threshold of inequity has been even enhanced by pending European integration. All...

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Main Author: Stefko, Martin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2016
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Online Access:https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=7277443
Source:Espaço Jurídico: Journal of Law, ISSN 2179-7943, Vol. 17, Nº. 2, 2016 (Ejemplar dedicado a: Espaço Jurídico Journal of Law [EJJL] | Quadrimestral), pags. 477-492
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dialnet-ar-18-ART00013681522020-03-13Guaranteed minimum income for all: A case of the EU and EEAStefko, Martinguaranteed minimum incomeEuropean welfare statesocial securityproteção da renda mínimawelfare state europeuseguridade socialFor the European Union, the question and the Future of Social Security Law, comes at critical moment: the natural tendency for creation new barriers that is inherent for each national welfare state as an international threshold of inequity has been even enhanced by pending European integration. All mature European welfare states are restrictive and every nation has filters which separates out desirable migrants in terms of their labour market potential. This article proves that neither old member states, nor the new ones are an exception. In our comparison, German social assistance scheme (especially the special Law on Social Benefits for Asylum-Seekers) guarantees, thanks to the active Constitutional Court, better positions for migrants than respective Czech laws. Even so, German laws set forth enough protective clauses to being able marginalised asylum-seekers as in the Czech Republic or any other member state of the EEA.Para a União Europeia, a questão e o futuro da Lei de Seguridade Social se encontra em um momento critico: a tendência natural para criar novas barreiras, que já é inerente a cada Estado de bemestar social como um limiar internacional de desigualdade, foi ainda reforçada pela integração europeia. Todos os estados europeus de bemestar maduros estão mais restritivos e cada nação tem filtros que separa migrantes desejáveis em termos de seu potencial mercado de trabalho. Este artigo demonstra que nem os antigos Estados-Membros, nem os novos são uma exceção. Em nossa comparação, o sistema de assistência social germânico (especialmente a Lei especial de benefícios para requerentes de asilo) garante, graças ao ativo Tribunal Constitucional, melhores posições para os migrantes do que as leis checas. Mesmo assim, as leis alemãs estabeleceram cláusulas suficientemente protetivas para marginalizar requerentes de asilo tanto quanto na República Checa ou em qualquer outro estado membro do EEE.2016text (article)application/pdfhttps://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=7277443(Revista) ISSN 1519-5899(Revista) ISSN 2179-7943Espaço Jurídico: Journal of Law, ISSN 2179-7943, Vol. 17, Nº. 2, 2016 (Ejemplar dedicado a: Espaço Jurídico Journal of Law [EJJL] | Quadrimestral), pags. 477-492engLICENCIA DE USO: Los documentos a texto completo incluidos en Dialnet son de acceso libre y propiedad de sus autores y/o editores. Por tanto, cualquier acto de reproducción, distribución, comunicación pública y/o transformación total o parcial requiere el consentimiento expreso y escrito de aquéllos. Cualquier enlace al texto completo de estos documentos deberá hacerse a través de la URL oficial de éstos en Dialnet. Más información: https://dialnet.unirioja.es/info/derechosOAI | INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS STATEMENT: Full text documents hosted by Dialnet are protected by copyright and/or related rights. This digital object is accessible without charge, but its use is subject to the licensing conditions set by its authors or editors. Unless expressly stated otherwise in the licensing conditions, you are free to linking, browsing, printing and making a copy for your own personal purposes. All other acts of reproduction and communication to the public are subject to the licensing conditions expressed by editors and authors and require consent from them. Any link to this document should be made using its official URL in Dialnet. More info: https://dialnet.unirioja.es/info/derechosOAI
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Espaço Jurídico: Journal of Law, ISSN 2179-7943, Vol. 17, Nº. 2, 2016 (Ejemplar dedicado a: Espaço Jurídico Journal of Law [EJJL] | Quadrimestral), pags. 477-492
language
English
topic
guaranteed minimum income
European welfare state
social security
proteção da renda mínima
welfare state europeu
seguridade social
spellingShingle
guaranteed minimum income
European welfare state
social security
proteção da renda mínima
welfare state europeu
seguridade social
Stefko, Martin
Guaranteed minimum income for all: A case of the EU and EEA
description
For the European Union, the question and the Future of Social Security Law, comes at critical moment: the natural tendency for creation new barriers that is inherent for each national welfare state as an international threshold of inequity has been even enhanced by pending European integration. All mature European welfare states are restrictive and every nation has filters which separates out desirable migrants in terms of their labour market potential. This article proves that neither old member states, nor the new ones are an exception. In our comparison, German social assistance scheme (especially the special Law on Social Benefits for Asylum-Seekers) guarantees, thanks to the active Constitutional Court, better positions for migrants than respective Czech laws. Even so, German laws set forth enough protective clauses to being able marginalised asylum-seekers as in the Czech Republic or any other member state of the EEA.
format
Article
author
Stefko, Martin
author_facet
Stefko, Martin
author_sort
Stefko, Martin
title
Guaranteed minimum income for all: A case of the EU and EEA
title_short
Guaranteed minimum income for all: A case of the EU and EEA
title_full
Guaranteed minimum income for all: A case of the EU and EEA
title_fullStr
Guaranteed minimum income for all: A case of the EU and EEA
title_full_unstemmed
Guaranteed minimum income for all: A case of the EU and EEA
title_sort
guaranteed minimum income for all: a case of the eu and eea
publishDate
2016
url
https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=7277443
_version_
1709751520784809984