Legal Guidance and Research / Experts / Giuditta Petreni
Giuditta Petreni#11513

Giuditta Petreni

Currently working as Senior Immigration Consultant at Mazzeschi Srl, a boutique firm specialized in Corporate Immigration and Citizenship Law.

Over 10 years’ experience in Corporate Immigration and Italian immigration law, assisting Companies as well as business investors for the relocation of their managers and staff to Italy. Over the years has developed extensive experience of advising companies and individuals on a full range of Italian immigration categories covered by the Italian Immigration Rules to provide strategic advice in order to achieve the best solutions for their immigration needs. She also developed an extensive experience of assisting private clients on a wide range of immigration solutions. 

Practice Area

Panel

  • Contributing Author

Experience

  • Mazzeschi srl (2010 - Present)
  • Principal Relocation Company (2009 - 2010)
  • Comune di Siena (Siena City Council) (2003 - 2008)

Qualification

  • Degree in Media Studies (2003)

Education

  • University of Siena (Italy) (1998 - 2003)

1 Contributions by Giuditta Petreni

A Practitioner’s Guide to EU/Schengen Border Management: Short‑Stay Visas, VIS, SIS, EES, ETIAS, Digitalisation, Appeals and 90/180‑day Rules
PRACTICE NOTES
A Practitioner’s Guide to EU/Schengen Border Management: Short‑Stay Visas, VIS, SIS, EES, ETIAS, Digitalisation, Appeals and 90/180‑day Rules
EU external border governance has been in continual flux, driven in particular by the exceptional influx of refugees, irregular migration, and the digitalisation of control mechanisms. A closer look at amendments to the Schengen Borders Code also makes clear how lessons from the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic have shaped its evolution over recent years. The EU’s principal aims here include progressively creating an integrated management framework for the external frontiers, strengthening backing for migration management, intensifying action against cross-border crime, and bolstering national authorities to improve internal security. The ‘EU Migration and Asylum’ policy forms a significant strand of external border control more broadly. Nevertheless, this Practice Note does not examine that policy; instead it concentrates on the general Schengen visa regime, the core instruments and platforms already deployed—the Visa Information System (VIS) and the Schengen Information System (SIS)—and those still awaiting operation—the Entry/Exit System (EES) and the European Travel Information and Authorisation system (ETIAS). Background information To begin with, when considering the EU cross-border control architecture and its visa policy, it is crucial, indeed, to identify precisely and clearly which countries are genuinely covered, in scope for these arrangements, as a starting point, for any meaningful analysis, and...
EU Law
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