Welcome to a new episode of the podcast Integration or ReImmigration.
I am Attorney Fabio Loscerbo.
This podcast is not about slogans, emotions, or political shortcuts. It is about law, state responsibility, and the structural failure of how immigration has been governed in Western democracies over the last decades. The paradigm I will discuss in this series—Integration or ReImmigration—does not come from ideology. It comes from legal practice, from courtrooms, from administrative procedures, and from the concrete consequences of policies that have systematically avoided one essential question: under what conditions does a foreign national have the right to remain?
For too long, immigration has been treated primarily as an economic phenomenon. Entry has been justified by labor demand, permanence by utility, and integration by the mere passage of time. The underlying assumption has been simple and deeply flawed: if someone works, if someone stays long enough, integration will eventually happen, and permanence will become legitimate almost automatically. This assumption has progressively emptied the State of its governing function. Immigration has shifted from being a legal relationship into a social fact, and in many cases into a permanent emergency.
The project Integration or ReImmigration starts from the opposite premise. Immigration is, first and foremost, a legal relationship between the individual and the State. It is not neutral, it is not automatic, and it is never unconditional. Entry into a territory does not generate a right to remain. Lawful presence does not transform itself into permanence by inertia. And integration is not a cultural aspiration, but a legally relevant obligation.
This paradigm did not emerge overnight. It developed through years of legal practice in immigration and asylum law, and through close observation of judicial reasoning, especially in cases where traditional categories—such as asylum or international protection—were no longer sufficient to govern real-life situations. Courts were increasingly asked to balance fundamental rights with public interest, vulnerability with responsibility, protection with reversibility. Out of this tension emerged the need for a different legal architecture.
That architecture is not built on exclusion, but on conditionality. Rights remain protected, but permanence becomes a process rather than a static status. Protection is preserved, but it is no longer confused with automatic stabilization. And return, when necessary, is reintroduced into the legal system not as a punishment or an ideological choice, but as an ordinary and foreseeable function of the State.
This is the core idea behind ReImmigration. The term does not refer to collective removals, ethnic criteria, or political rhetoric. ReImmigration means something very precise: the lawful conclusion of a migration path when the legal conditions for remaining are no longer satisfied. It presupposes that integration was possible, that the individual was given a real opportunity to comply with the rules of the host society, and that the State exercised its evaluative function through procedures, not arbitrariness.
What makes this paradigm necessary today is not a change in political mood, but the visible collapse of automatic integration. Across Europe and beyond, we see the same pattern: lawful entry followed by ungoverned permanence, formal regularity without substantive integration, and the progressive loss of State credibility. When the State cannot decide who stays and under what conditions, it stops governing and starts tolerating. And tolerance without rules does not produce integration—it produces fragmentation.
This podcast is therefore about rebuilding a system. A system where entry, stay, and return are not disconnected moments, but phases of a single legal cycle. A system where protection does not exclude responsibility, and where enforcement does not negate rights. A system where integration has legal meaning, and where its failure has legal consequences.
In the next episodes, we will move step by step through this reconstruction. We will analyze the crisis of the economic paradigm, the transformation of immigration into a legal process, the role of conditional protection, the relevance of conduct, and finally the legal foundations of ReImmigration as an ordinary function of the State. The goal is not persuasion, but clarity. Because without clarity, immigration policy remains trapped between moralism and denial.
This is not about being for or against immigration. It is about restoring governability through law.
Thank you for listening.
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