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PROME generated an ambitious set of academic outputs that advance the theoretical and empirical study of migrant rights. Two major scholarly contributions were accepted for publication by the end of the project: an article in the International Journal of Constitutional Law that theorises how legal status creates structural limits to migrant rights protection (pre-print available via SSRN), and a book chapter for the edited volume Race, Racism and the ECHR, forthcoming with Hart Publishing, which introduces a new approach to xenophobic discrimination in international human rights law. These pieces establish the project’s initial core conceptual contributions and bring PROME into dialogue with leading debates in constitutional theory, discrimination law, and migration studies.

Several additional outputs are nearing completion and will be published in the months following the completion of PROME. These include two co-authored articles: one on national security-based expulsions and access to information in Bulgaria, and another on ECtHR adjudication of Greek hotspot cases. In addition, PROME included a strong dissemination and training dimension: the lead researcher has delivered multiple invited talks in Zürich, Ghent, Budapest, Utrecht, and Cologne and participated in doctoral seminars at South-West University. Finally, he published two posts on the widely-read Strasbourg Observers blog, both which are publicly available: one on the Greek hotspot cases (October 2024) and one advocating for an animus-based approach to xenophobic discrimination (June 2025).