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#544 Border Back for Immigration Control?

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Manage episode 513572000 series 2841800
Content provided by Niall Boylan. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Niall Boylan or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Host Niall talks to Paul Tryvaud opens the lines to listeners to debate a hot topic sparked by the EU’s new Entry/Exit System (EES), which went live on 12 October 2025 for 29 European countries.

Migration and Home Affairs

The system digitally records non-EU nationals’ entries and exits (passport data, facial image, fingerprints) to better detect overstays and identity fraud.

Migration and Home Affairs

But there’s a catch: Ireland has so far chosen not to take part in full integration with the system. Niall asks: should Ireland reconsider? And more provocatively — could Ireland re-establish a border checkpoint with Northern Ireland to help enforce such controls?

Short history of the border

The border between what is now the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland was drawn after partition in 1921, creating a frontier dividing the six counties that remained in the UK from the 26 which became (later) the Republic.

Through decades of conflict, that border was heavily policed, with checkpoints, customs posts, and strict controls during The Troubles.

With the Good Friday Agreement (1998) and subsequent peace processes, many of those controls were dismantled or “softened,” and the border became largely invisible — allowing free movement of people, goods, and services.

In practice, there is still a de facto border (e.g. regulatory and customs checks under the Northern Ireland Protocol), but not the old model of physical frontier posts.

The last time there was a “hard border” with full checkpoints and infrastructure was before and during much of the 20th century, gradually phased out through the peace process.

  continue reading

747 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 513572000 series 2841800
Content provided by Niall Boylan. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Niall Boylan or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Host Niall talks to Paul Tryvaud opens the lines to listeners to debate a hot topic sparked by the EU’s new Entry/Exit System (EES), which went live on 12 October 2025 for 29 European countries.

Migration and Home Affairs

The system digitally records non-EU nationals’ entries and exits (passport data, facial image, fingerprints) to better detect overstays and identity fraud.

Migration and Home Affairs

But there’s a catch: Ireland has so far chosen not to take part in full integration with the system. Niall asks: should Ireland reconsider? And more provocatively — could Ireland re-establish a border checkpoint with Northern Ireland to help enforce such controls?

Short history of the border

The border between what is now the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland was drawn after partition in 1921, creating a frontier dividing the six counties that remained in the UK from the 26 which became (later) the Republic.

Through decades of conflict, that border was heavily policed, with checkpoints, customs posts, and strict controls during The Troubles.

With the Good Friday Agreement (1998) and subsequent peace processes, many of those controls were dismantled or “softened,” and the border became largely invisible — allowing free movement of people, goods, and services.

In practice, there is still a de facto border (e.g. regulatory and customs checks under the Northern Ireland Protocol), but not the old model of physical frontier posts.

The last time there was a “hard border” with full checkpoints and infrastructure was before and during much of the 20th century, gradually phased out through the peace process.

  continue reading

747 episodes

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