Karolína Babická
First name
Karolína
Last name
Babická (née Linhartová)
CV
Karolína Babická joined the Institute for European Studies in February 2011 as a visiting doctoral researcher. She is pursuing her PhD studies at the Faculty of Law, Charles University in Prague. Her research project is focusing on the international legal framework of irregular migration in Europe. More specifically, it aims at comparing the UN Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families with the rights those migrants have according to the current legal framework in the European Union.
Karolína Babická studied Law at the Charles University (CZ) and the University of Nottingham (UK). She received her Master in Law in 2008, graduating on a thesis concerning the international legal framework of human trafficking. Before starting her PhD studies, she gained some work experience as migration coordinator in Caritas Czech Republic, lawyer for the Association for Probation and Mediation in Justice and researcher for the Multicultural Center Prague within the PROSINT project led by the International Centre for Migration Policy and Development: Study on the National Policy Frame for the Integration of Newcomers.
IES information
Department Category
Position
Researcher Migration and Diversity
Phone
+32 (0)475.462067
Fax
Activities, publications
Fields of Activity
International and European Law, International Migration and Human Rights Law.
List of External Publications
Linhartová, Karolína. Implementace Palermského protokolu o obchodování s lidmi v regionu jihovýchodní Asie (The Implementation of the Palermo Protocol on Human Trafficking in the Region of South-East Asia), Trestněprávní revue (Criminal Law revue) 8/2008, 237-242.
Linhartová, Karolína. Právní úprava obchodování s lidmi v České republice (The Legal Regulation of Human Trafficking in the Czech Republic), Trestní právo (Journal of Criminal law) 6/2008, 25-29.
Linhartová, Karolína. Boj s obchodem s lidmi – mezinárodněprávní rámec (Combating human trafficking – International legal framework), Právník (The Lawyer) 4/2007, pp 17-30.
Linhartová, Karolína. Právní rámec boje proti obchodování s lidmi (The Legal framework of combating trafficking in people), Trestní právo (Journal of Criminal law) 07-08/2006, 41-43.
Linhartová, Karolína. Vztah migrace a obchodu s lidmi (The Relation of Migration and Human Trafficking), Studentská konference mezinárodního práva – sborník (Student Conference on International Law – collection), Charles University 2007, 137-143.
List of engagements
- Remeso Graduate School in International Migration and Policies, 10/2010, Irregular Migrants of Europe
- Journées d'études du Cefres, 3/2010, The current legal framework for national minorities in the Czech Republic. Why are the Vietnamese not a recognized national minority?
Research:
Irregular migrants in the European Union – do they enjoy the rights contained in the UN Migrant Workers Convention? (PhD Dissertation Project)
Karolina Babicka
The EU estimates today about 8 million irregular migrant workers in its territory. Human rights of many of them are being violated in the “area of freedom and democracy”, in the European Union. Irregular labour migrants often face dangerous working conditions, long hours, low pay but also other fundamental human rights violations. The European culture and democracy is based on respect for basic human rights and those should be respected within the EU anytime and towards anyone.
The set of fundamental human rights for all migrants, including those in irregular situation, are entailed in the 1990 UN Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families (CMW). Nobody has ever denied the right for all human beings for these rights, however, any EU Member state has so far signed or ratified the CMW. One of the most often employed arguments by the EU Member states why not to accede to the CMW has been the claim of redundancy and unnecessity of it.
Most of all because the rights contained in the CMW are already covered by other international and regional instruments that are legally binding in the EU. This claim is to be examined in this study. Every single right from the CMW granted to irregular migrants is to be compared to the current legal framework in the European Union, primarily to the rights based in the core UN international treaties and in the CoE Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms.

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