Archive
Europol, une technopolice de plus en plus insaisissable
Paperjam, 11 November 2025. Read More
How Europol is cozying up to Microsoft, Palantir, Clearview & Co.
Heise, 10 November 2025. Read More
European Parliament: Development committee report pushes to use aid as migration leverage
The European Parliament’s Committee on Development (DEVE) is set to debate a report today that supports using development aid to encourage migration control cooperation by non-EU states. Read More
Outsourcing Borders: Mailing list
Border externalisation: new documents show EU states want to further ease deportations
The latest issue of our bulletin on EU border externalisation policies includes: second revision of the deportation Regulation proposal; the EU parliament's development committee urged to tie aid to deportation cooperation; and the Danish Presidency of the Council of the EU hailing Turkey-EU migration cooperation as a "success". Read More
UK: Politicians must “stop using our human rights as a scapegoat”
Almost 300 organisations, including Statewatch, have called on the UK government to defend the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Government ministers and opposition politicians in both the UK and across Europe are demanding changes to, or even withdrawal from, the ECHR, claiming it prevents them from introducing more restrictive immigration policies. Read More
EU: New Handbook offers guide to privacy and data protection for immigration and asylum practitioners
Statewatch is publishing a handbook that explains how data protection law can be used to seek remedies and redress for people in the EU’s immigration and asylum systems. Aimed at lawyers, case workers, volunteers and others working on immigration and asylum cases, it offers an overview of key digital technologies, and privacy and data protection concepts and cases. Read More
Data Protection Handbook on Asylum and Migration in Europe
The EU’s immigration and asylum system is governed by a complex set of rules. As well as being regularly amended by legislators, those rules are also subject to frequent interpretation (and re-interpretation) by the courts. The increasing use of digital technologies and databases for the enforcement of immigration and asylum law adds a further twist to this complicated scenario. Read More
Behind closed doors: Europol’s opaque relations with tech companies
As part of its research into the expanding—and largely unchecked—use of AI by EU security agencies, Statewatch delves into largely uncharted territory: Europol’s links with the private sector. A survey of this landscape reveals conflicts of interests, secrecy and opacity, and a whole array of intrusive and invasive technologies that Europol would like to adopt, and make more widely available to European police forces. Read More
US attacks on the international rule of law: will the EU do anything?
Last week, the Slovenian government called on EU justice ministers to “protect the international rule of law and justice system,” which is facing US sanctions due to attempts to bring Israel officials to justice for crimes committed in Gaza. The discussion has now apparently been taken from the EU Justice and Home Affairs Council to “other Council formations.” Whether any practical steps will follow remains to be seen. Read More