Good morning, I’m Avv. Fabio Loscerbo, and this is a new episode of the podcast Integration or ReImmigration.
Today I’m speaking to a UK audience to explain a legal model that already exists in Italy and that may be of interest from a comparative and policy perspective: complementary protection as the only framework in which lawful stay is structurally linked to integration.
I start from a concrete administrative decision issued by the Genoa Territorial Commission on 18 December 2025. I am not focusing on the individual facts of the case, but on what that decision tells us about the architecture of immigration law. In that case, refugee status and subsidiary protection were refused, yet removal was legally blocked under Article 19 of the Italian Immigration Act. This did not happen because of discretionary compassion, humanitarian sympathy, or conditions in the country of origin. It happened because the individual had reached a level of integration that made removal legally disproportionate.
This is the key distinction. In Italian law, complementary protection is the only legal institute where the right to remain is not based on a predefined immigration category, a formal visa route, or an external risk factor. It is based on integration itself. Integration is not treated as a policy aspiration or a moral objective, but as a legally relevant fact. It is assessed, weighed, and used as the decisive criterion to determine whether removal is lawful.
For a UK audience, this approach is particularly striking. British immigration law is largely structured around statutory routes and formal eligibility criteria. Integration may be encouraged, and it may become relevant at later stages such as settlement or citizenship, but it is rarely the legal foundation of lawful residence itself. The Italian model shows a different possibility: a system in which remaining lawfully in the country depends on demonstrated integration, rather than on indefinite tolerance or purely formal status.
This is why complementary protection functions as a legal laboratory. It is not a marginal or weaker form of protection. On the contrary, it is the most advanced instrument in the system, because it explicitly connects rights to responsibility. The law sends a clear message: if you integrate, your presence becomes legally protected; if you do not integrate, the legal system cannot justify your continued stay.
From this structure emerges the paradigm “Integration or ReImmigration.” This is not a political slogan and not a call for harsher enforcement. It is the logical consequence of an integration-based legal model. If integration can justify lawful stay, then the absence of integration must logically lead to return. ReImmigration is not punishment, and it is not hostility toward migrants. It is the orderly outcome of a system that conditions residence on participation in the host society.
The Genoa Commission’s decision illustrates this logic clearly. It does not grant permanent settlement and does not undermine state authority. It simply recognises that, at a given moment, integration has reached a level of legal relevance that temporarily blocks removal. At the same time, it confirms that lawful stay is never automatic and never unconditional.
This is the real debate immigration law must face in the coming years. Not open borders versus closed borders, not compassion versus control, but integration as a condition of lawful stay, and return as the natural consequence of non-integration. Complementary protection already applies this logic in Italian law. In many ways, the law is already ahead of the political debate.
If you’d like to explore these ideas further, you can find in-depth analyses on www.reimmigrazione.com or listen to the other episodes of the podcast Integration or ReImmigration.
See you in the next episode.
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