Good morning and welcome. Today I want to clarify, in a simple and direct way, the difference between remigration and ReImmigration—two approaches that are often confused but fundamentally distinct.
In recent months, the term “remigration” has reappeared in the European debate, partly due to content circulating within the identitarian sphere. One of the most frequently mentioned names is Austrian activist Martin Sellner, who has helped bring the idea of return back into public discussion as a possible response to the perceived weaknesses of current migration systems in Europe. Mentioning him serves only to place the debate in its proper context, without any intent to engage in polemics.
Remigration focuses primarily on cultural dynamics and the capacity for assimilation, attempting to respond to a real demand for greater order and coherence in migration governance. However, it does not address a crucial issue: the need to move beyond the economicist approach that, over the past thirty years, has classified individuals as “resources” or “costs,” preventing the creation of a stable model based on individual responsibility and verifiable pathways.
This is precisely where the paradigm “Integration or ReImmigration” comes in.
ReImmigration is built on a legal and administrative framework that values personal and measurable criteria: knowledge of the language, stable employment, respect for the rules, and orderly participation in the community. And the tool to assess these elements already exists: the integration agreement. The key is to apply it seriously, with clear indicators and meaningful evaluations.
The second component involves the administrative procedure. Complementary protection currently provides an advanced testing ground: within this procedure, the level of integration, employment status, language proficiency, and degree of local attachment are evaluated. It already enables an individual and concrete assessment and can be expanded and standardized to form the technical backbone of the paradigm.
The third element concerns how ReImmigration is implemented. Here, too, the tools already exist. In complementary protection procedures, the foreign national deposits their passport with the competent authority for the entire duration of the process. This detail is essential: it means that if, at the end of the evaluation, integration is deemed insufficient and there are no legal barriers to return, the authorities already have the necessary document to carry out the decision in an orderly, planned and legally guaranteed manner. This is not an exceptional measure, but a coherent use of an existing mechanism.
A dedicated police body—either regional or national—could operate alongside this system, specifically trained to implement decisions on ReImmigration as the final step of an administrative procedure and not as an emergency action.
Remigration and ReImmigration are not conflicting models. They respond to different questions. Remigration focuses mainly on cultural dimensions. ReImmigration builds an institutional process that defines how integration is measured, which administrative procedure should be used, and how final decisions are implemented, making full use of tools already present in the legal system.
Europe’s future requires seriousness, coherence, and stable administrative instruments. This is the space in which the paradigm of responsible integration takes shape.
I am attorney Fabio Loscerbo, and I invite you to read the full analysis on www.reimmigrazione.com.
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