The international NGO Digital Policy Institute – millennium 3000 has developed the EU Asylum Policy Convergence Programme. The EU Asylum Policy Convergence Programme called the “PRAGUE CONVENT” takes a systematic and comprehensive approach to addressing current sensitive issues related to EU asylum policy.
The “PRAGUE CONVENT” is a coordinated framework for cooperation on asylum policy, addressing not only specific issues related to the reception and protection of asylum seekers, but also the broader context of global challenges and changes in migration. Its main purpose is not only to achieve an effective and fair asylum policy at EU level, but also to contribute to a global order that promotes security, social, economic and legal stability of society as a key element for maintaining peace, social cohesion, economic development and legal justice.
The Digital Policy Institute – millennium 3000 is actively working to create an environment where actors with different interests and perspectives can meet, discuss and jointly seek innovative and sustainable solutions to the challenges of asylum policy in the current European context. Among other objectives of this international programme is to address the many threats that increase the risk of social instability, terrorism, violations of human rights and freedoms, injustice, inhuman and degrading treatment of human and living beings, crime and brutality, bullying, racism, discrimination, poverty, despair, hopelessness, depression, frustration, tyranny and hatred, and are at the root of the global refugee crisis. Dramatic events in the world portend extremely unfavorable developments, particularly in the area of EU asylum policy.
The purpose of the EU asylum policy convergence programme, called the “PRAGUE CONVENT”, is to unify the European asylum system to meet the highest security and technological parameters set by individual EU member states. The massive migration that the European Union will face in the next fifteen years is a threat not only to the entire European continent, but above all to the EU citizens themselves. For this reason, it is essential to adopt completely new security measures that will reliably strengthen and secure the security of the entire Schengen area.