Welcome to a new episode of the podcast Integration or ReImmigration.
I am Attorney Fabio Loscerbo.
Complementary protection occupies a central and often misunderstood position in contemporary immigration law. It exists to prevent unlawful removal in situations where return would expose the individual to serious harm, yet where the strict legal requirements of asylum or international protection are not met. Its function is protective, but its logic is fundamentally different from that of refugee status.
At its core, complementary protection is a negative guarantee. It does not create a positive right to permanent stay. It limits the State’s power to remove when removal would violate legal obligations derived from human rights law, constitutional principles, or binding international norms. Its purpose is to prevent illegality, not to produce automatic stabilization.
This distinction is essential. When complementary protection is treated as a substitute for asylum, or as an alternative pathway to permanence, its legal nature is distorted. What was designed as a flexible and conditional instrument becomes a de facto residence status, detached from its original function. Over time, protection is confused with entitlement, and conditionality disappears.
The paradigm Integration or ReImmigration restores the correct legal framing. Complementary protection operates within the broader process of lawful presence. It suspends removal, but it does not suspend evaluation. It recognizes vulnerability, but it does not eliminate responsibility. Most importantly, it preserves reversibility.
Reversibility is not a defect of complementary protection. It is its defining feature. The protection exists as long as the conditions that justify non-removability persist. When those conditions change, the legal barrier to return may fall. This does not weaken rights; it aligns them with reality. A system that cannot adapt to changing circumstances inevitably produces injustice, either by removing unlawfully or by tolerating unlawfully.
One of the reasons complementary protection has become controversial is precisely because reversibility has been politically neutralized. Legislators and administrations have often avoided explaining its conditional nature, fearing social and political backlash. Courts, in turn, have been forced to stretch protective reasoning to compensate for the absence of clear legislative frameworks. The result is confusion and inconsistency.
Complementary protection should not be read as a promise of permanence. It is a legal pause. A pause that protects the individual while allowing the State to retain its governing function. During this period, the legal relationship continues. Integration obligations remain relevant. Conduct matters. Cooperation with authorities remains essential.
This approach also prevents the collapse of credibility. When protection automatically leads to stabilization, every protective decision becomes politically charged. Public trust erodes, and protection itself is delegitimized. By contrast, when protection is clearly framed as conditional and reviewable, its legitimacy is strengthened.
Another critical aspect is proportionality. Complementary protection allows the legal system to respond proportionately to complex situations. It avoids the all-or-nothing logic of asylum versus removal. It recognizes that protection can be necessary without implying long-term inclusion. This proportionality is indispensable in contemporary migration governance.
From a legal perspective, complementary protection also rebalances the relationship between courts and administration. Courts intervene to prevent unlawful removal. Administration retains responsibility for managing stay over time. When these roles are confused, the system becomes judicialized by default, and political responsibility disappears.
Understanding complementary protection correctly also clarifies why it cannot be the foundation of an integration strategy. Integration requires stability, predictability, and long-term perspective. Complementary protection, by contrast, is designed to remain open to change. Treating it as an integration pathway undermines both integration and protection.
This does not mean that individuals under complementary protection are excluded from society or deprived of rights. Fundamental rights remain intact. Access to basic services is ensured. What is excluded is automatic permanence. The legal relationship remains conditional, and its evolution depends on both external conditions and individual conduct.
Complementary protection, therefore, fits perfectly within the paradigm Integration or ReImmigration. It protects without surrendering governability. It prevents illegality without renouncing evaluation. It allows the system to function without forcing asylum to absorb situations it cannot legally contain.
In the next episode, we will move from substance to procedure. We will examine how complementary protection is processed in practice, why identification and control are indispensable, and why procedure is not the enemy of rights but their necessary framework.
Thank you for listening.
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