30 days, six months… forever? Border control and the French Council of State

<p>For Christmas 2017, the French Council of State – the Supreme Court for administrative matters in France – gave a nasty present to those attached to the free movement of persons in the Schengen area. In a ruling issued on 28 December (see here, in French), it upheld the decision of the Fren...

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Main Author: Sébastien Platon
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Max Steinbeis Verfassungsblog GmbH
Series:Verfassungsblog
Subjects:
Online Access:https://verfassungsblog.de/30-days-six-months-forever-border-control-and-the-french-council-of-state/
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author Sébastien Platon
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author_sort Sébastien Platon
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description <p>For Christmas 2017, the French Council of State – the Supreme Court for administrative matters in France – gave a nasty present to those attached to the free movement of persons in the Schengen area. In a ruling issued on 28 December (see here, in French), it upheld the decision of the French Government to reintroduce, for the ninth time in a row, identity control at its “internal” borders, i.e. borders with other Schengen countries – even though checks at internal borders are not, in fact, systematically performed. This decision, issued without even bringing the matter to the Court of Justice of the European Union for a preliminary ruling, sets aside, probably unlawfully, the time limit set by the Schengen Borders Code.</p>
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spelling doaj.art-8079a5ebed464f8387325746096734552022-12-22T01:28:59ZdeuMax Steinbeis Verfassungsblog GmbHVerfassungsblog2366-70442366-704430 days, six months… forever? Border control and the French Council of StateSébastien Platon<p>For Christmas 2017, the French Council of State – the Supreme Court for administrative matters in France – gave a nasty present to those attached to the free movement of persons in the Schengen area. In a ruling issued on 28 December (see here, in French), it upheld the decision of the French Government to reintroduce, for the ninth time in a row, identity control at its “internal” borders, i.e. borders with other Schengen countries – even though checks at internal borders are not, in fact, systematically performed. This decision, issued without even bringing the matter to the Court of Justice of the European Union for a preliminary ruling, sets aside, probably unlawfully, the time limit set by the Schengen Borders Code.</p> https://verfassungsblog.de/30-days-six-months-forever-border-control-and-the-french-council-of-state/border control, Conseil d'Etat, Schengen
spellingShingle Sébastien Platon
30 days, six months… forever? Border control and the French Council of State
Verfassungsblog
border control, Conseil d'Etat, Schengen
title 30 days, six months… forever? Border control and the French Council of State
title_full 30 days, six months… forever? Border control and the French Council of State
title_fullStr 30 days, six months… forever? Border control and the French Council of State
title_full_unstemmed 30 days, six months… forever? Border control and the French Council of State
title_short 30 days, six months… forever? Border control and the French Council of State
title_sort 30 days six months forever border control and the french council of state
topic border control, Conseil d'Etat, Schengen
url https://verfassungsblog.de/30-days-six-months-forever-border-control-and-the-french-council-of-state/
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