The European Union’s New Pact on Migration and Asylum, which entered into force on June 12, 2026, represents the most significant overhaul of European migration policy since the Dublin system was established. Rather than introducing minor procedural adjustments, the Pact reflects a broader political and legal transformation in how the EU approaches migration, asylum, and border management. The Pact attempts to reconcile competing priorities, such as safeguarding the right to asylum, strengthening external border controls, and distributing responsibility more evenly among member states.
Whether these objectives can coexist in practice remains one of the central questions surrounding the new framework.
The Pact did not emerge out of the blue; rather, it is the outcome of years of difficult negotiations following the 2015 refugee crisis, a period during which migration evolved from a humanitarian issue into one of Europe’s most politically divisive policy areas. Since 2015, migration has become a defining issue in domestic politics, influencing elections, party competition, and public debate across the continent.
Growing support for parties advocating stricter border controls has shifted the political environment in which migration policies are formulated.
The adoption of the Pact therefore represents not only legal reform but also an institutional response to changing political realities. Security, sovereignty, and border control have assumed greater prominence alongside the EU’s traditional commitment to humanitarian protection and human rights.
At its core, the Pact introduces several interconnected legal reforms intended to harmonize migration procedures across the European Union. One of its most notable innovations is the mandatory pre-entry screening process for individuals arriving irregularly at the EU’s external borders. Before entering the asylum system, migrants undergo identity verification, health examinations, security checks, and vulnerability assessments. This process is designed to replace fragmented national procedures with a common European standard, thereby improving efficiency and reducing inconsistencies among member states.
Another important reform concerns the modernization of the Eurodac database. Originally developed to store the fingerprints of asylum seekers, Eurodac has been transformed into a much broader biometric system that now incorporates facial recognition and expanded registration requirements. The objective is to improve responsibility-sharing among member states while limiting secondary movements within the Schengen Area. From a governance perspective, this represents a significant expansion of Europe’s digital migration infrastructure.
At the same time, the technical difficulties experienced during the system’s first day of operation highlight an important reality: ambitious legal reforms require equally competent administrative capacity. Without effective implementation, institutional credibility may quickly be undermined. Moreover, the digitalization of asylum procedures and the storage of sensitive biometric data are likely to remain contentious issues within European and international human rights frameworks.
The Asylum Procedures Regulation constitutes another cornerstone of the Pact. It establishes accelerated border procedures for applicants originating from countries with low asylum recognition rates or for those considered potential security risks. EU institutions argue that these procedures will shorten waiting times, reduce administrative backlogs, and improve the overall efficiency of asylum processing.
Despite the European Commission presenting the New Pact on Migration and Asylum as a balanced compromise between humanitarian protection and effective migration management, its implementation has generated strong criticism from civil society organizations, humanitarian agencies, legal experts, and migration scholars. Critics argue that the accelerated procedures may leave asylum seekers with limited access to legal assistance, shorter appeal periods, and prolonged stays in border facilities. As a result, the balance between administrative efficiency and procedural justice remains one of the most contested aspects of the reform. From a human rights perspective, advocates also worry that accelerated procedures may limit asylum seekers’ effective access to domestic legal remedies.
Additionally, the Pact introduces greater harmonization through common screening procedures, biometric registration, and a flexible solidarity mechanism. However, many observers argue that these institutional improvements come at the expense of the very principles that have historically defined the Common European Asylum System. Rather than simply reforming asylum procedures, the Pact reflects a broader political shift in which migration is increasingly framed through the lenses of security, deterrence, and border control rather than international protection.
In this sense, it represents not merely an administrative or legal reform, but a broader transformation of Europe’s migration policy. Many critics view the Pact primarily as a political response rather than as a purely legal or humanitarian framework.
In this regard, several international organizations have expressed concerns regarding the practical consequences of the new framework. For example, Caritas Europa argues that the expansion of border procedures risks undermining access to fair asylum procedures and calls for greater investment in reception systems, legal pathways, and integration rather than deterrence.
Save the Children has warned that the wider use of border screening and accelerated procedures could expose children and families to prolonged stays in detention-like facilities, potentially violating the principle that the best interests of the child should guide migration policy.
Similarly, the International Rescue Committee (IRC) has cautioned that faster processing should not come at the expense of due process, emphasizing that reduced access to legal assistance and shorter appeal periods increase the risk that individuals with legitimate protection claims may be returned before their cases are adequately examined.
The Migration Policy Group, while acknowledging the need for a more coherent European asylum system, has questioned whether the Pact adequately balances efficiency with fundamental rights and has highlighted the risk that implementation may vary considerably across member states.
One of the most controversial aspects of the Pact is its growing reliance on externalization. By strengthening cooperation with transit countries, expanding the concept of “safe third countries,” and exploring return hubs outside EU territory, the Union is increasingly shifting migration management beyond its borders. From a policy perspective, this may improve border governance and reduce irregular arrivals. From a legal and ethical perspective, however, critics argue that it risks transferring responsibility to countries with more limited asylum systems and weaker human rights protections.
This approach raises difficult questions regarding accountability, particularly where effective judicial oversight is absent or significantly weaker than within the European Union itself. The result is an asylum system that increasingly manages migration before individuals ever reach European territory, thereby making access to protection more uncertain despite the continued formal recognition of the principle of non-refoulement.
Perhaps the broader concern is political rather than legal. The Pact illustrates how migration debates across Europe have gradually shifted toward positions that were once largely associated with the political margins. Concepts such as enhanced border securitization, expanded detention powers, external processing, and stronger return policies have increasingly become part of mainstream European policymaking.
While these measures respond to genuine public concerns over migration management and state capacity, they also demonstrate how domestic political pressures have reshaped the Union’s approach to asylum. The challenge for the European Union is therefore not simply to manage migration more efficiently, but to ensure that efficiency does not gradually replace the humanitarian commitments that have long underpinned European asylum law.
If implementation prioritizes deterrence over protection, the New Pact may ultimately be remembered less as a successful institutional reform than as a significant moment in the gradual redefinition of Europe’s identity as a normative and humanitarian actor.
An equally significant, yet often overlooked, implication of the New Pact concerns its impact beyond the European Union. The Pact is likely to reshape migration governance in EU candidate and neighboring countries, including Turkey, Georgia, Moldova, Ukraine, Serbia, Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, and North Macedonia. As these countries serve as major transit routes toward the European Union or seek closer political integration with Brussels, they will face increasing pressure to align their migration and asylum systems with the new European framework. This alignment is expected to include stronger external border controls, expanded biometric registration systems, closer cooperation with EU agencies such as Frontex and EUAA, enhanced information sharing, and the implementation of readmission agreements. Consequently, migration governance is becoming an increasingly important dimension of both EU enlargement and neighborhood policy.
While regulatory convergence may strengthen institutional capacity and improve border management, it also risks transferring greater responsibility for migration control to countries with more limited financial resources, administrative capacity, and asylum infrastructures. For candidate countries, particularly Turkey and Georgia, the Pact therefore represents more than a European legal reform; it increasingly functions as a governance model that shapes domestic migration legislation, border policies, and relations with the European Union, reinforcing the broader trend toward the externalization of migration management beyond EU territory.
By Abdulmelik Alkan, Guest Writer
Abdulmelik Alkan is an Adjunct Professor at Webster University













