Erased in Life and Death: Intersecting Injustices faced by People on the Move in Serbia: Summary 5/7

Following Friday’s release, the fourth of six sections we’re sharing ahead of publication of the full report in July, this fifth summary section focuses on the role of the border regime itself; not merely a backdrop but an active and structuring force. The border regime is simultaneously a causal factor, a web within which all of our context and discussion  is enmeshed and from which it cannot be separated, and a central facilitator of EU policy and practice.

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Erased in Life and Death: Intersecting Injustices faced by People on the Move in Serbia - Summary 4/7

Following Tuesday’s release, the third of six sections we’re sharing ahead of publication of the full report in July, this fourth summary section focuses on the role of activists in documenting, reporting, and challenging official failures in the handling of deaths of people on the move across Serbia As they support families in the pursuit of justice and preserve the memory of those lost.

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Erased in life and death: intersecting injustices faced by people on the move in Serbia - Summary 2/7

Our full report ‘Erased in life and death: intersecting injustices faced by people on the move in Serbia’ explores the systemic neglect, institutional silence, and structural violence surrounding the deaths of people on the move in Serbia.

Following Monday’s overview of our initial findings and the realities of death on the move in Serbia, we present the second of six sections to be released ahead of publication of the full report in July. This summary section focuses on our work to map the deaths of people on the move in Serbia.

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Erased in life and death: intersecting injustices faced by people on the move in Serbia: Report summary 1/7

Our full report ‘Erased in life and death: intersecting injustices faced by people on the move in Serbia’ explores the systemic neglect, institutional silence, and structural violence surrounding the deaths of people on the move in Serbia. It is not a new intervention, nor a pioneering effort. Rather, it builds on the longstanding work of civil society organisations, cemetery workers, communities of faith, journalists, researchers, and families who have long documented, buried, and remembered the dead. Below, the first of six sections to be released ahead of publication of the full report in July offers an overview of our initial findings and the realities of death on the move in Serbia. 

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Collective Aid
Formidable Trust: The plan for 2025

Frontline humanitarian services and rights-based advocacy across Europe are eroding in real time. The deeper crisis is not vanishing funding - it is the growing needs, isolated responses, and the breakdown of the civic scaffolding that has held this movement together until now. Our response is Strategic Mutualism.

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Collective Aid
Lines that Hurt: A new monthly advocacy report

Over the past two months,  Bosnia-Herzegovina and Serbia have witnessed a deeply troubling surge in violence targeting people on the move.This alarming escalation has claimed the lives of as many as nine individuals* in Serbia and two in Bosnia-Herzegovina, with others severely injured. 

The border regime, engineered by nation-states and legitimised by European institutions in defence of  “Fortress Europe”, has, paradoxically, no limits when it comes to inflicting pain and further violence. National borders are not simply lines on a map. They are active tools of violence used to target certain social groups in order to reproduce an imperialist and colonial social system. And as such, their reach goes far beyond the separation of two neighbouring states. The people who have lost their lives at the European Union’s geographical and ideological margins embody the suffering, dehumanisation and arbitrary fates endured by people on the move. Physically and symbolically, as the impact of their deaths reverberates far beyond the borders where they occurred, they encapsulate the grief and trauma carried by loved ones thousands of kilometres away.


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‘Europe Day’ through a broken mirror: Fortress walls and institutional complicity

On May 9, the EU dresses itself in blue and gold, lighting up its monuments to celebrate a shared vision of unity, peace, and prosperity. Simultaneously, across the continent of Europe, fences are being fortified and policies tightened in order to deny these ideals to people on the move at its internal and external borders. 

As the Union evolves, what is the price of solidarity which is solidified by the exclusion of the ‘others’ condemned to violence and death at its borders?

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Deportation Nation: The impact of Trump’s ‘America First’ policies on the lives of people on the move

Since his inauguration in January, President Trump has enforced deportation raids, sent US Marines to construct a ‘fortified’ border wall extension in San Diego, and terminated the existing Customs and Border Protection (CBP) asylum scheduling system, cancelling all existing appointments, effectively making it impossible for people on the move to apply for asylum in the United States (US).

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Surveilled and Isolated: How European authorities are turning essential devices into targets

For people on the move, staying updated on news from home can be just as important as knowing what is happening around them; a phone helps people to stay in touch with their family and friends, offering comfort against feelings of isolation and loneliness while supporting psychological well-being.They can also help to gather evidence, documenting illegal pushbacks, and other violence exerted against them.Most importantly, phones can save lives. Yet, despite the vital role phones play, authorities often fail to recognise - or deliberately ignore - their importance. We have heard, worryingly, numerous accounts of Serbian, Croatian and Bulgarian police smashing or confiscating devices. Our Advocacy and Communications Officer in Sarajevo looks further into the issue…

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What is Caporalato and how can it affect people on the move?

Caporalato is an Italian term that refers to illegal labour intermediation, commonly known as the ”gangmaster system” in English. It involves the recruitment of largely workers from migrant backgrounds to perform various types of labour, predominantly in agriculture.


Our Communications and Media volunteer Giovanna Bressan explains more about the phenomenon and what it means for people on the move.

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New publication: Bulgaria Needs Asessment: Briefing Note

Today, we release a Briefing Note on our Bulgarian Needs Assessment, conducted at the end of January 2025.

It presents key findings from the assessment, background information, and country context, concluding with four recommendations to improve the lives of people on the move.  It underscores Bulgaria’s failure to uphold its obligations concerning people’s fundamental rights, the critical need for advocacy to challenge these abuses, and the broader implications of Europe’s restrictive migration policies, which continue to prioritise deterrence over the safety and well-being of people on the move.

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Collective Aid