The lack of effective responses by the EU deepen the humanitarian crisis that causes huge danger and trauma to people escaping from a clear and immediate risk of persecution in their home countries. This crisis adds one more dimension to the multiple crises Europe has been facing for some time now, and is closely interwoven with human rights protection, which is considered to be one of the EU’s greatest achievements.
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With the support of Open Society Foundations, the School of Public Policy’s Global Policy Academy hosted a two-day workshop on July 13-14. It was organized and facilitated by SPP Professor and Associate Dean Julia Buxton with Peter Sarosi from the Hungarian Civil Liberties Union and Maria Phelan from the International Harm Reduction Association.
Stopping rape: Towards a comprehensive policy has been hailed as “an exceptional analysis of the research and policies of rape prevention in an international context.” The book, which was published by Policy Press in July 2015, is a revised version of a 2013 study that was commissioned by the European Parliament's Committee on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality.
Center for Media, Data and Society (CMDS) Fellow Roxana Radu has recently published an article in Internet Policy Review, co-authored by Jean-Marie Chenou and entitled "Data control and digital regulatory space(s): towards a new European approach." The article examines the stance of the European Union vis-à-vis internet services company Google in two controversial instances: the "right to be forgotten" and the implementation of EU competition rules.
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