WASHINGTON — The European Union and its member states over the past 25 years have increasingly relied on cooperation with the Maghreb states of Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia to address shared transnational challenges ranging from border security to irregular migration and drug trafficking. While cooperation on counterterrorism seems to have produced results, the impact of European initiatives to reduce irregular migration flows from the region is less evident, a new report from the Migration Policy Institute’s Transatlantic Council on Migration finds.
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