Welcome to a new episode of the podcast Integration or ReImmigration.
I am Attorney Fabio Loscerbo.
Recognizing ReImmigration as an ordinary function of the State immediately raises a practical question: how is this function exercised? Law does not operate in the abstract. It requires instruments, structures, and specialized authorities capable of transforming legal decisions into concrete outcomes. Without these elements, even the most coherent legal framework remains purely declaratory.
One of the central weaknesses of contemporary immigration systems is the fragmentation of responsibility. Decisions are taken by one authority, implemented by another, and often neutralized by administrative inertia in between. This fragmentation creates a structural gap between law and reality. ReImmigration exists on paper, but not in practice.
Effective enforcement requires dedicated instruments. Immigration cannot be governed as a secondary task delegated to overburdened general services. It requires specialized administrative bodies, trained personnel, and clear chains of responsibility. When immigration enforcement is treated as an ancillary function, execution becomes inconsistent and selective.
This is why the concept of immigration policing must be addressed without ideological filters. Immigration policing is not synonymous with repression. It is the administrative and operational capacity of the State to manage entry, stay, and return in a coherent manner. Every legal system relies on such capacity. The absence of it does not produce freedom; it produces arbitrariness.
The reluctance to develop enforcement structures has often been justified in moral terms. Control is portrayed as incompatible with protection. Execution is framed as inherently violent. These narratives obscure a simple truth: without enforcement, rights themselves become unstable. Protection that cannot be managed becomes politically unsustainable and legally fragile.
Another critical instrument is data and information management. Identification, registration, and traceability are not optional. They are prerequisites for any lawful procedure. A system that cannot track cases cannot evaluate them. A system that cannot locate individuals cannot conclude processes. Technology, when used within legal boundaries, strengthens due process rather than undermining it.
Enforcement also requires procedural coordination. Administrative authorities, courts, and law enforcement must operate within a shared framework. When judicial decisions are disconnected from administrative capacity, courts are pushed into symbolic rulings. When administration ignores judicial outcomes, legality is compromised. ReImmigration requires alignment.
Specialization is equally important. Immigration law is complex, dynamic, and highly sensitive. Treating it as a residual competence leads to errors, delays, and abuses. Dedicated units with legal, administrative, and operational expertise are essential to ensure that enforcement remains lawful, proportionate, and effective.
The absence of proper instruments has also distorted public debate. When return is rarely executed, it becomes perceived as either impossible or illegitimate. Political discourse then oscillates between denial and radicalization. Building functional enforcement mechanisms normalizes return and removes it from ideological confrontation.
It is important to emphasize that enforcement does not mean indiscriminate action. It means structured, predictable, and reviewable execution of decisions. Each case is individual. Each outcome is assessed. Each action is accountable. This is precisely what distinguishes lawful enforcement from abuse.
The paradigm Integration or ReImmigration requires the State to invest in its own capacity. Capacity is not a technical detail. It is a constitutional requirement. A State that legislates without executing abdicates its responsibility and transfers power to informal actors, social tension, and judicial improvisation.
Without instruments, integration policies lose credibility. Without enforcement, protection loses legitimacy. And without a functioning apparatus, ReImmigration remains a theoretical construct.
In the next episode, we will examine a concrete case that illustrates these dynamics: the Albania model. We will analyze it not as a deterrence strategy, but as an example of execution and institutional capacity in practice.
Thank you for listening.
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