EU Agencies; Legal Protection; Frontex; Law Enforcement; Effective Remedies; Composite Procedures
Abstract :
[en] EU external border management has become a shared enforcement space, where EU and Member States’ authorities cooperate within a highly integrated and complex legal framework. With the expansion of its mandate, Frontex increasingly acts as the operational arm of national authorities while remaining shielded under the umbrella of EU competences. Within this setting, the division of powers and the attribution of responsibility between the Agency and Member States remain ambiguous, as does the attention given to the corresponding system of legal protection. Against this backdrop, the thesis addresses the research question: to what extent are individuals, particularly third-country nationals, able to enforce their rights and seek protection against breaches arising from EU actions?
This thesis contributes to the academic debate on effective remedies for rights violations linked to Frontex’s activities, while also engaging with the broader discourse on judicial protection in the EU’s hybrid administrative system. The analysis extends beyond Frontex to other decentralised agencies operating within the AFSJ, whose remedial frameworks are equally complex. These agencies function within composite administrative structures, where decision-making and enforcement involve both EU and national actors in a deeply interdependent ways. The analysis reveals that the significant expansion of AFSJ agencies’ has not been accompanied by adequate oversight, creating an accountability gap that the EU judiciary alone cannot bridge. The lack of clear allocation of powers and effective accountability mechanisms underscores the urgent need to strengthen judicial protection while exploring alternative remedies, including administrative and extra-legal measures, to effectively address rights violations.
Precision for document type :
Index, concordance, corpus
Disciplines :
European & international law
Author, co-author :
RIZZUTO FERRUZZA, Silvia ; University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance > Department of Law > Team Eleftheria NEFRAMI ; UNIBO - University of Bologna > Department of Legal Studies
Language :
English
Title :
Frontex and Effective Remedies: Assessing Mechanisms of Legal Protection in a Shared Enforcement Space
Defense date :
27 January 2025
Number of pages :
385
Institution :
Unilu - University of Luxembourg [Law Economics and Finance], Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Degree :
Docteur en Droit (DIP_DOC_0007_B)
Cotutelle degree :
Dottore di Ricerca
Promotor :
NEFRAMI, Eleftheria ; University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance (FDEF) > Department of Law (DL)
President :
MENDES, Joana ; University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance (FDEF) > Department of Law (DL)
Jury member :
Casolari Federico; UNIBO - University of Bologna
Tsourdi Lilian; UM - University of Maastricht
Florin Coman-Kund; EUR - Erasmus University Rotterdam
By analysing fundamental rights breaches in composite procedures and shared enforcement activities, this study assesses Frontex’s position within the EU’s multi-level governance structure. While recognising the essential role of national courts in ensuring judicial protection, the research focuses on remedies and oversight mechanisms specifically at the EU level. The composite nature of EU decision-making raises critical concerns regarding the division of competences between the EU and its Member States, a challenge central to EU executive federalism, and puts to the test the effectiveness of existing legal safeguards.
In examining these challenges, the thesis proposes the interplay of two fundamental procedural rights enshrined in EU law: the right to an effective remedy and the right to good administration. It argues that their combined interpretation enhances legal protection within the EU, ensuring both the rule of law and effective control over the exercise of public authority.
By addressing these issues, the study contributes to to a wider scholarly trend to analysing the comprehensiveness of the EU’s complete system of remedies and and judicial safeguards within its multi-level framework, while also engaging with the ongoing debate on the democratic deficit of EU agencies. It underscores how the tension between shared administration and judicial protection amplifies governance complexities, further aggravating the EU’s rule of law crisis.