Abstract

This article explores the recent emergence of community sponsorship of refugees in Europe, an approach which shares responsibility between civil society and the state for the admission and/or integration of refugees. Originally a Canadian model developed to support the resettlement of Indochinese refugees, the model has gained momentum in Europe, with a number of states piloting or establishing community sponsorship schemes. This proliferation, while generally seen as positive for international protection of refugees, has led to conceptual confusion and a significant range of approaches under the “umbrella” concept of community sponsorship. As a result, community sponsorship today may be understood both as a form of resettlement and a complementary pathway to protection. While interest and momentum around community sponsorship is high, little work currently exists mapping and analysing how jurisdictions adopt the community sponsorship model. With reference to existing work on policy transfer, this contribution takes stock of community sponsorship models in Europe; analyses how community sponsorship may become a viable policy option in European states as a form of transnational policy transfer; and sets out a number of challenges for the future development of community sponsorship in Europe.

Highlights

  • Community sponsorship is touted as one of the solutions to the grave global refugee situation as a means to support plummeting resettlement numbers, improve integration and change hearts and minds in Global North asylum states (Bond and Kwadrans, 2019)

  • In Europe, the fallout of the 2015 migrant and refugee crisis has driven a search for innovative approaches to refugee protection, including significant interest in the development of community sponsorship schemes in European Union (EU) member states

  • The development of community sponsorship in Europe stands at a key juncture

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Summary

Nikolas Feith Tan *

Specialty section: This article was submitted to Refugees and Conflict, a section of the journal Frontiers in Human Dynamics. A Canadian model developed to support the resettlement of Indochinese refugees, the model has gained momentum in Europe, with a number of states piloting or establishing community sponsorship schemes. This proliferation, while generally seen as positive for international protection of refugees, has led to conceptual confusion and a significant range of approaches under the “umbrella” concept of community sponsorship. With reference to existing work on policy transfer, this contribution takes stock of community sponsorship models in Europe; analyses how community sponsorship may become a viable policy option in European states as a form of transnational policy transfer; and sets out a number of challenges for the future development of community sponsorship in Europe

INTRODUCTION
DEFINING COMMUNITY SPONSORSHIP
Between Resettlement and Complementary Pathway
Core Elements of Community Sponsorship
TRANSNATIONAL POLICY TRANSFER
COMMUNITY SPONSORSHIP AS TRANSNATIONAL POLICY TRANSFER
Transferring Community Sponsorship in New Jurisdictions
THE FUTURE OF COMMUNITY SPONSORSHIP IN EUROPE
Maintaining the Protective Core of Community Sponsorship
The Relationship Between Community Sponsorship and State Resettlement
Proving Efficiency
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