Complementary Protection Is Not an Alternative to ReImmigration: It Is the Test of Real Integration — Commentary on the Decree of the Tribunal of Bologna, R.G. 11421/2024, 27 November 2024


Complementary protection remains one of the most delicate instruments in Italian immigration law, situated at the point where individual rights, social cohesion and the assessment of private life under Article 8 ECHR intersect. It is not designed as a substitute for international protection or as an alternative pathway for residence. It is, rather, the mechanism through which the legal system recognises that, in certain cases, forced return would impose a disproportionate burden on a person’s dignity, identity and the social ties developed on the territory.

The recent decree of the Tribunal of Bologna, R.G. 11421/2024, issued on 27 November 2024, fits precisely within this framework. In reconstructing the facts and evaluating the supporting documentation, the judge assigns decisive weight to the applicant’s integration pathway — not as an abstract claim, but as a concrete dimension that emerges from employment, housing stability and meaningful social relations. The reasoning is anchored in Article 19 of the Immigration Act, where complementary protection is rooted, and harmonises with the case law of the European Court of Human Rights on private life and consolidated social identity.

Complementary protection as recognition of an identity built over time

The case analysed by the Tribunal of Bologna illustrates clearly that complementary protection is not an emergency measure nor a residual escape route for those who do not fall within the classic categories of international protection. It is the legal space in which integration becomes a concrete evaluative parameter, capable of shaping the outcome of the proceeding.
When the judge weighs established private life in Italy against the implications of return to the country of origin, the exercise is not abstract: it is a constitutional proportionality assessment. If a person has developed meaningful ties, a recognisable social identity and a stable contribution to the community, an abrupt interruption of this pathway may conflict with the essence of Article 8 ECHR.

It is in this perspective that complementary protection acquires a role that goes beyond procedural mechanics and becomes a substantive assessment of the quality of residence. Mere physical presence is not enough: what matters is whether the person has constructed a social position that is identifiable and not imposed externally but achieved through personal commitment.

Integration as a substantive, not decorative, parameter

The Bologna decree highlights a point often overlooked in the public debate: integration is not a rhetorical expression or a symbolic principle used to soften administrative decisions. It is a substantive parameter requiring concrete and verifiable elements.
Employment, stable housing, meaningful social relationships and the absence of harmful conduct are not generic indicators; they are the measurable signs of a private life rooted in the host society.

In this sense, complementary protection does not only protect vulnerability; it safeguards the continuity of the personal identity developed in Italy. Radicamento — social rootedness — becomes an essential component of the legal assessment.
This corresponds to both Italian constitutional jurisprudence and the European Court of Human Rights, which recognises that “private life” includes not only the emotional sphere but also the social identity formed through work, relationships and participation in community life.

The policy question: integration as a duty and ReImmigration as its natural counterpart

If complementary protection shields those who have genuinely built an integration pathway, an inevitable systemic question arises: what is the outcome for those who refuse to integrate?
Here, the Integration or ReImmigration paradigm provides a coherent interpretative framework. Integration is not a unilateral right; it is the result of a reciprocal commitment. The decree of the Tribunal of Bologna confirms that those who demonstrate real adherence to the host community may deserve protection; those who refuse such adherence cannot claim indefinite residence.

Complementary protection is therefore not an alternative to ReImmigration.
It is its logical counterpart.
On one side, it protects individuals who have demonstrated a substantive connection with Italy; on the other, it implicitly defines the scope of ReImmigration as the path for those who decline to meet integration duties.
The two trajectories differ, but they share a common foundation: individual responsibility.

Towards a migration policy coherent with European principles and constitutional order

The decree of 27 November 2024 reinforces a trend that has gained importance in recent years: integration is not a neutral or marginal notion, but a legally relevant dimension of private life. Complementary protection neither weakens nor replaces the ordinary logic of migration control. Instead, it anchors the evaluation of residence to the person’s actual contribution and commitment.

Within this framework, ReImmigration should not be regarded as punitive. It is the natural administrative outcome for individuals who reject the essential duties underpinning social coexistence.
A coherent migration policy must balance rights and responsibilities, providing protection where integration is real and enabling return where it is not.

Complementary protection, properly understood, becomes the testing ground for this balance — the moment in which the legal system recognises integration not as rhetoric but as an objective fact with normative consequences.

Conclusion

Complementary protection does not undermine ReImmigration, nor does it render it unnecessary. Rather, it clarifies its application.
When an individual has built a genuine integration pathway, the legal system may intervene to prevent a disruptive return.
When such a pathway is absent, ReImmigration becomes the coherent and predictable outcome.

The decree of the Tribunal of Bologna offers an authoritative confirmation of this logic, positioning complementary protection precisely where the protection of the person meets the duty of integration — and where the sustainability of migration policy is ultimately determined.


Avv. Fabio Loscerbo
Lobbyist – EU Transparency Register ID: 280782895721-36

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