Articles for category: Regionen

Voting from Abroad Ahead of Germany’s 2025 Snap Election

Over the past few weeks, several reports have appeared in German media on expected challenges with postal voting from abroad ahead of Germany’s snap election scheduled for 23 February 2025. For example, the recent case of a German citizen living in South Africa highlighted that ballot papers will be sent to registered postal voters only in the first week of February, whereas normally this is done six weeks ahead of election day. We suggest that countries should formally allow and facilitate postal voting for citizens living abroad via their country’s diplomatic missions and official courier services.

Ceci n’est pas un Ban?

On 19th January 2025, the ‘Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act’ became operative in the USA in respect of TikTok, routinely (but somehow deceptively) referred to as ‘TikTok ban’. I will not deal in detail here with the saga (which readers of this blog are already familiar with), but with the misalignment between legal form and political narrative: A vaguely formulated statute became a symbolical proxy for principled confrontation over the underlying values.

The Baltic Politics of Post-War Accountability for Russia

Will the Russian war against Ukraine prove to be a watershed moment for the implementation of international criminal law on the aggressor? This contribution focuses on the Baltic states’ accountability-seeking for Russia as the politics of deterrence by legal means and a struggle for historical justice.

America’s First Religious Public School?

On 24 January 2025, the US Supreme Court granted certiorari to a case that could fundamentally reshape the nature of public education in the United States by permitting public schools – so called charter schools – to become religious in character. However, this blog argues that this case is not merely about school choice or religious freedom, but rather reflects the culmination of “private disestablishment”— a legal phenomenon where entities that operate at the blurred boundary between public and private recast themselves as entirely private actors while performing public functions. By doing so, they secure public benefits—such as funding and regulatory advantages—without bearing the constitutional obligations, such as anti-discrimination mandates or religious neutrality, that typically constrain public institutions. 

Asyl für russische Kriegsdienstverweigerer

Während die Unionsparteien mit Stimmen von AfD und FDP mutmaßlich rechtswidrige Migrationsanträge im Bundestag verabschieden lassen und die Brandmauer zur extremen Rechten abtragen, wird in Deutschland (vorerst) weiter über Asylanträge entschieden. In zwei bemerkenswerten Urteilen hat das Verwaltungsgericht Berlin festgestellt, dass russischen Kriegsdienstverweigerern aufgrund des drohenden Einsatzes in einem völkerrechtswidrigen Angriffskrieg subsidiärer Schutz zustehe. Es wendet sich damit nicht nur gegen die Entscheidungspraxis des Bundesamts für Migration und Flüchtlinge (BAMF), sondern auch gegen das eigene Oberverwaltungsgericht.

Grüße aus den Niederlanden

Am 29. Januar 2025 stimmte der Bundestag über Anträge der Union zur Verschärfung der Migrationspolitik ab. In einem bislang beispiellosen Tabubruch in der Nachkriegsgeschichte der deutschen Politik nahmen Union und FDP erstmals Stimmen der extrem rechten AfD in Kauf. Ein Blick über die Grenze in die Niederlande zeigt, was passiert, wenn Mitte-rechts-Parteien der radikalen Rechten die Hand reichen. Statt sie zu schwächen, legitimiert und stärkt es sie.

Warum eine unbefristete Abschiebungshaft unzulässig ist

In seinem denkwürdigen Beschluss vom 29. Januar 2025 hat der Deutsche Bundestag mit knapper Mehrheit u.a. beschlossen, dass Personen, die vollziehbar ausreisepflichtig sind, nicht mehr auf freien Fuß sein dürfen, sondern unmittelbar in Haft genommen werden müssen. Ganz abgesehen davon, dass alle in Deutschland vorhandenen Haftplätze, auch in den regulären Strafvollzugsanstalten, nicht ausreichen, um alle vollziehbar Ausreisepflichtigen aufzunehmen, stellt sich die Frage, ob diese Forderung mit höherrangigem Recht vereinbar ist. Dies betrifft zunächst die Rückführungsrichtlinie der EU und dann aber natürlich auch die Grundrechte. Um die Antwort vorwegzunehmen: eindeutig nein!

Remembering Democracy

In the years following the brutal suppression of pro-democracy protests in Belarus in 2020 and 2021, a wave of politically engaged Belarusian artists — visual artists, musicians, filmmakers, poets and novelists — have been driven into exile. Scattered abroad, these artists not only use their work to reflect on the repression at home, but also seek new ways to keep the spirit of resistance alive.

The Habitats Directive as a Tool for Systemic Biodiversity Litigation

On 22 January 2025, the District Court of The Hague found the Netherlands in breach of the Habitats Directive and the Dutch nitrogen targets by failing to stop the deterioration of protected habitats and by failing to prioritise the most vulnerable habitats through its nitrogen targets. This blogpost provides an overview of the judgment and argues that the case enables a link between the location specific approach of EU nature protection and a systemic dimension and highlights the strength of the Habitats Directive. Conversely, it shows some limitations regarding the remedy and a missed opportunity to consider the longer-term and inter-generational impacts

Law, Coercion, and State Crime

On January 26, 2025, President Donald J. Trump announced via Truth Social retaliatory measures against Colombia following President Gustavo Petro’s refusal to allow US deportation flights. These included a 25% emergency tariff on Colombian imports, escalating to 50% within a week. The Trump administration’s use of unilateral economic sanctions on countries opposing US policies is part of a long history of imperial interventions. Sanctions are central to the colonial arsenal of economic statecraft, disproportionately targeting the Global South. I argue that sanctions should be recognized as a form of state crime due to their socially injurious effects.