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March 18, 2025

ENAR Joint Statement: Reimagining Racial Justice in Europe

Re-imagining Racial Justice in Europe: A Chance to Build an Alternative, Hopeful Future for All

This statement was drafted by ENAR and signed by IGLYO and over 40 organisations. You can read the original statement on ENAR's website.


At Anti-Racism and Diversity Week, more than 40 civil society organisations stand united in our hope for a better future, but also in our demand for action.  We call on EU leaders to stand with us and confront systemic racism to build a Europe with a legacy of diversity and justice.


Despite strong legislation against racial discrimination and the adoption of the first EU Anti-Racism Action Plan in 2020, systemic racism remains pervasive throughout Europe. This is evident in the rising influence of political parties that openly justify the denial of rights for the most marginalised, especially racialised people at the intersections of various forms of discrimination. Recent data from the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) and from a number of CSOs make it clear: racialised communities, including Roma, Sinti and Travellers, People of African, Arab, Asian and Latin descent, Black people, Muslims and Jews (or those perceived as such), indigenous people, including migrants amongst them, continue to face significant barriers. From police violence and discriminatory migration policies to workplace exclusion and shrinking civic space, the European project is failing those it has long marginalised.


European leaders cannot afford silence. By allowing racialised communities to be scapegoated and pushed to the margins, they are complicit in paving the way for authoritarian, exclusionary voices. These forces endanger the lives and freedoms of all Europeans, dragging the continent further away from a future of justice and equality.  


This moment demands a radical shift. We believe our leaders can rise to the challenge, confronting the tide of authoritarianism and racial injustice to create a Europe grounded in human dignity and democracy. During the Anti-Racism and Diversity Week, civil society gathers in the European Parliament not only as an act of resistance but also a powerful demonstration of our belief in a better future. We know that another world is possible - one that embraces care, justice, and safety for all, especially those at the margins. It is a world fit to address both past and present social and climate injustices. In the face of global developments that push us further from equality, the EU has the power to become the beacon of hope that the world desperately needs.


In response to fragmented policies and an overfocus on criminalisation and securitisation, we call for a shift from punitive policies to those that prevent harm and repair the damage already done. The goal must be to break down the systems that keep racial inequality in place, as outlined in the EU Anti-Racism Action Plan. Europe also needs to invest in community-driven solutions for justice, equity, and safety. Only by embracing an intersectional and restorative approach, guided by the lived experience of those most affected, can we uproot the systems of racism - anything less is empty rhetoric.


The upcoming equality strategies, and specifically the anti-racism strategy, present a critical moment to confront the dangerous trends sweeping through Europe. The following priorities must be central to this strategy:

  • A renewed intersectional anti-discrimination framework that also safeguards the rights of people on the move.
  • A legal ban on racial discrimination in law enforcement and migration control.
  • A focus on equality and fundamental rights within the Rule of Law framework, with a sharp focus on racial discrimination, asylum rights, and the rights to protest and free expression.
  • A redirection of funding towards social provision and community services, with strict non-discrimination conditions attached to the allocation of funds.
  • Strong, inclusive participatory models for designing anti-racism policies, ensuring the voices of marginalised communities lead the way.
  • Ensuring that all equality strategies, anti-poverty strategy and the European Pillar of Social Rights address the needs and protection of racialised groups, including migrants.

The Anti-racism movement stands united and ready to mobilise collectively to build a Europe that is just, inclusive, and committed to a future where everyone, regardless of their race, religion, sexual orientation, gender and gender identity, disability, age, socio-economic background, can thrive.

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