Steve Peers
When can a Member State require
immigrants to undertake integration courses? The Court of Justice dealt
squarely with this issue for the first time in today’s judgment in P and S,
which concerned the application of the EU’s Directive on the long-term
residence of non-EU citizens. (The UK, Ireland and Denmark have an opt-out from
this law).
The judgment has a broader
relevance, since the EU Directive on family reunion for non-EU citizens also
provides for Member States to adopt integration conditions. On the other hand,
EU free movement law does not provide for Member States to impose such
conditions on EU citizens or their family members. As for Turkish nationals, the
EU-Turkey association agreement does not provide for such a condition either,
but Member States may impose one subject to a standstill rule in most cases (see last year's Dogan judgment, discussed here).
Today’s judgment turns on the
wording of the long-term residence Directive, which states that Member States ‘may
require third-country nationals to comply with integration conditions, in
accordance with national law’. The case concerned non-EU citizens who already
had long-term resident status under the Directive, but Dutch law still requires
them to take civic integration courses and penalises them with a fine every
time they fail. A later change to Dutch law requires non-EU citizens to pass
these courses before they get
long-term residence status, but that later version of the law was not directly at
issue in this case.
Judgment
According to the Court, the requirement
to take integration courses does not as such infringe the Directive, first and
foremost because the Directive clearly permits an integration condition to be
imposed before obtaining long-term resident status. Next, the Court ruled that
the requirement did not breach the equal treatment rule set out in the
Directive, since Dutch nationals could be presumed to have knowledge of Dutch
society and the Dutch language, whereas non-EU citizens could not.
However, that was not the end of
the Court’s analysis. It then focussed on whether the national rules undercut the
effectiveness of the Directive. The Directive had as its main aim the
integration of non-EU citizens, and the Court stated that learning the national
language and about the host State could facilitate communication with Dutch
citizens, and ‘encourages interaction and the development of social relations’.
Acquiring a knowledge of Dutch also ‘makes it less difficult’ to find work and
take up training courses. The integration requirement therefore contributed to
the aims of the Directive.
The Court went on to say that there
were some limits upon what Member States can do, as regards ‘the level of
knowledge required to pass the civic integration examination’, ‘accessibility
of the courses and the material
necessary to prepare’ for the exams, the level of registration fees and ‘specific
individual circumstances, such as age, illiteracy or level of education’. But
the Court seemed most concerned about the amount of the fines, which were quite
high and would be imposed for every failure, or even where the non-EU citizen
had not sat the exam within the required time. The fines were also imposed on
top of the high fees to sit the exam. So in principle this aspect of the system
infringed EU law, although it was left to the national court to apply the Court’s
ruling in practice. Finally, the Court stated that it was irrelevant whether
the persons concerned already had long-term resident status, since (in this
case) it was not a condition for getting or retaining that status.
Comments
The Court’s ruling makes clear
that Member States can in principle impose integration requirements for
long-term residence status, subject to the principle of effectiveness. The main
feature of that principle in this case was the fees for failing (or not
sitting) the exam, in conjunction with the fees for sitting the exam. Obviously
the Dutch government is now obliged to lower those fees, and other Member
States’ rules could be challenged on the same basis. The ruling is obviously
particularly relevant to less wealthy migrants who would struggle to pay the
fines and test fees several times over.
Although the Court did not rule in
any detail on the other limits which EU law imposes upon national integration
requirements, such limits certainly exist, as regards the level of knowledge
needed to pass, the accessibility of tests and materials, and ‘specific
individual circumstances’. It is not clear from the judgment exactly how Member
States are obliged to take account of such circumstances – whether by means of
a complete exemption from the test or a different version of it. But it should
be noted that the list of specific circumstances mentioned by the Court is not
exhaustive (‘such as’).
While the judgment clearly
implies that Member States may even withhold long-term residence status if an
integration test is not passed, the Court did not rule on that issue as such.
So it remains open to argue that there may be stricter limits or other factors
to consider when Member States impose an integration condition to acquire that
status.
Nor did the Court rule on whether
the failure to meet an integration condition could be a ground to lose long-term resident status. The
Directive does not list this as one of the possible grounds for loss of that status,
and it should follow from the objective of the Directive that the list of
grounds which could lead to such a loss of status is exhaustive. This also
follows from the structure of the Directive: if failure of an integration test
could lead to loss of status, why did the drafters of the Directive only
mention integration tests in the clause dealing with acquisition of that
status?
Today’s judgment is only the
first in a line of cases upcoming concerning integration conditions (the next
batch of cases concern the parallel clause in the family reunion Directive). As
a starting point, the Court has struck a good balance between ensuring that
immigrants fit into society and the need to prevent integration tests forming a
disguised means of excluding migrants from ever really fitting in despite their
genuine efforts.
Barnard & Peers: chapter 26
Sounds like EU court is more for political points then human rights.
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