The VULNER project started from the observation that ‘vulnerability’ is increasingly becoming a key concept at the EU and global levels, when developing and implementing laws and policies towards migrants seeking protection, such as refugees and asylum seekers – and this numerous contexts, which range from organizing asylum processes in Western countries and evaluating asylum claims, to selecting refugees for resettlement, and to developing and implementing aid programmes for refugees in first countries of asylum that are also developing countries.
Yet, ‘vulnerability’ is understood differently depending on the actors and the context in which it is applied. This can be problematic, as every migrant seeking protection is vulnerable to some extent. The focus on the specific needs of some vulnerable migrants thus results from a policy choice to value some vulnerabilities over others. If not based on scientific data that give non-stereotyped understanding and conceptualisation of the vulnerabilities that are actually lived and experienced by the migrants seeking protection, such policy choices run the risk of failing to address, exacerbating or even producing further vulnerabilities.
The overall objective of the VULNER project was to improve the knowledge on migrants' vulnerabilities, through a comprehensive study of how migrants seeking protection experience their ‘vulnerabilities’, and how these experiences are continuously shaped and produced in interactions with the legal and policy frameworks and implementation practices of the relevant decision-makers. It was to produce the scientific data, knowledge, and conceptualizations needed to prevent stereotyped understandings of the vulnerabilities of migrants seeking protection - and to develop a critical reflection on the promises, challenges, and pitfalls of mobilizing vulnerability as a conceptual tool for asylum and migration governance.
Therefore, the VULNER project documented, evaluated and reflected on 1. how the ‘vulnerabilities’ of the migrants seeking protection are assessed and addressed in the protection regimes of select countries in Europe (Belgium, Germany, Italy and Norway), the Middle East (Lebanon) and Africa (Uganda) and 2. how and to what extent this in turn shapes or even produces the ‘vulnerabilities’ as experienced by the migrants seeking protection through a process of constant interactions.