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Why is the EU (especially Germany) willing to accept Syrian refugees?

This problem is more complicated. During this period, all kinds of values torn by the China media leaked from the German circle to China's website, and all kinds of news with unknown origin and unknown authenticity (many of which are rumors) really flooded the current social networks. Personally, I talk about it from the perspective of discipline methodology. On the issue of refugees, the EU countries are actually not unified, and only a few countries with relatively good economies on the European continent firmly maintain a tolerant policy towards refugees.

Therefore, from the perspective of neo-institutionalism, there is a legal problem in the EU's request for a unified refugee policy, saying that this legal problem makes European member States have to partially obey a "* * * refugee policy", and the EU can be called a "* * refugee policy".

The system of this policy lies in: Schengen Agreement is the integration of EU's public policies and internal affairs programs in the public sphere, which is far from being as simple as sharing borders. The treaty is the basis of all refugee policies. -Dublin Convention is the embryonic form of refugee policy, that is, it stipulates the rights and responsibilities of signatory countries in refugee application and processing-Maastricht Treaty: it mainly puts forward the concepts of "safe country" and "safe third country", mainly to clarify the specific definition of "asylum right" in the EU region in international law. This treaty is often combined with the resolution on the third host country for judicial interpretation. The latter defines the so-called "safe country" standard, so some EU countries have become legal "safe countries" and "safe countries of origin". The former is mainly developed countries in Europe (such as Germany), while the latter is mainly neighboring countries bordering refugee areas (such as Eastern European countries).

Of course, the above system is not mandatory for the time being, but it basically sets a precedent for defining refugees and formulating policies by relying on cooperation and agreements between member governments. -Amsterdam Treaty, which mainly stipulates the basic rules of immigration within the EU. Including the establishment of the European Refugee Foundation, the integration of the European fingerprint identification system, and the establishment of the repatriation policies of EU member States, the responsibility system for accepting refugees in each country, and the minimum acceptance standards for refugees. Since the beginning of this treaty, the European refugee policy has been launched, and the EU can * * * require member States to fulfill their rights and responsibilities. -Tampere Conference is extremely important in the history of the European Union. To put it simply here, in fact, this meeting established the substantive existence of "* * * and refugee policy", integrated the interpretation, definition and cooperation of civil law systems in EU countries, and in essence, it was a partial concession of EU judicial power to member States, forming the embryonic form of a unified judicial system. Then there are two supplementary treaties: the Nice Treaty mainly establishes the number of members of the European Commission (according to population distribution) and the "majority voting principle".

-The Hague Plan mainly gives specific authorization to the judicial institutions of European entities such as the European Commission, including, first, improving information exchange and sharing among police in various countries, preventing terrorist attacks more effectively and strengthening the coordination of judicial systems in various countries. And * * * in refugee policy, EU * * and asylum policy, all countries implement uniform standards. Therefore, the EU can impose "refugee quotas" on countries in the name of the EU.