In 2025, Greece continues to serve as both a gateway and a bottleneck for refugees seeking protection in Europe. This paper critically examines the evolving landscape of refugee rights in Greece, focusing on the tension between international legal obligations and national policy responses. The European Union’s shifting asylum framework, border management practices, and increasing reliance on externalization strategies have exacerbated legal and humanitarian concerns. In Greece, these pressures manifest in restrictive asylum procedures, deteriorating reception conditions, and systemic challenges to access justice and social rights for asylum seekers and recognized refugees.
Through a doctrinal analysis of international, European, and Greek legal frameworks—especially the 1951 Refugee Convention, the EU Common European Asylum System (CEAS), and Greece’s Law 4636/2019—the paper assesses whether current policies align with fundamental rights standards. Empirical data from recent reports, court cases, and field assessments are used to contextualize the legal critique. Particular attention is given to vulnerable groups such as unaccompanied minors and survivors of gender-based violence, who face disproportionate risks under current reception and detention regimes.
The paper argues that while Greece remains legally bound to uphold refugee rights, operational deficiencies, political pressures, and EU policy gaps have created an environment of conditional protection and limited legal remedies. It concludes with policy recommendations aimed at restoring rights-based asylum procedures, improving compliance with international standards, and enhancing solidarity mechanisms within the EU.
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Rights under pressure: current refugee protection and legal challenges in Greece
Published:
19 January 2026
by MDPI
in The 1st International Online Conference on Societies
session Equity/Equality, Diversity and Inclusion
Abstract:
Keywords: refugee rights; asylum law; European Union; refugee reception; legal protection
