Resurrecting Taboo Policies? Explaining Collective Regularisations for Unauthorised Immigrants During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Southern Europe

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AI-generated summary by claude@2026-07, 2026-07-15

This study investigates why some Southern European countries reinstated collective immigration regularizations during COVID-19 while others did not, finding the decision depended on political pressures, government ideology, and existing policy frameworks.

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Abstract

Collective regularisation programmes providing legal status to unauthorised immigrants werefrequently used by European countries until the late 2000s, when they fell out of fashion. In 2020,at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, some European governments made use of collectiveregularisations again, breaking this “taboo”, while others did not. Why this variation in response?We compare policy-making in three Southern European countries that have frequently resorted tocollective regularisations in the past, but which took divergent paths during the Covid-19 pandemicdespite facing similar health and economic-related pressures: a collective regularisation in Portugal,a targeted regularisation in Italy, and no regularisation in Greece. Informed by a theoretical modelthat builds on existing explanatory frameworks on migration policy, we use expert interviews, legaland policy documents, parliamentary debates, and press coverage to explain variation in policyoutputs. Our findings point to the importance of three conditions: (1) the balance of liberalisingversus restrictionist pressures, (2) government ideology, and (3) the scope and implementation ofpre-existing regularisation mechanisms. We show that the Covid-19 pandemic worked as a catalystfor the return of policies that were previously considered “taboo” only when policy changes wereconsidered to be cost-free. We argue that, despite functional pressures and discursive opportunities created by the pandemic, the regulation of the status of unauthorised migrants is characterised by continuity and incremental change rather than by sudden ruptures.

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