INTERNACIONALNI UNIVERZITET TRAVNIK U TRAVNIKU
SAOBRAĆAJNI FAKULTET TRAVNIK U TRAVNIKU
EKOLOŠKI FAKULTET TRAVNIK U TRAVNIKU
FAKULTET INFORMACIONIH TEHNOLOGIJA TRAVNIK U TRAVNIKU
FAKULTET POLITEHNIČKIH NAUKA TRAVNIK U TRAVNIKU
u saradnji sa
FAKULTETA ZA LOGISTIKO UNIVERZA V MARIBORU, SLOVENIJA
organizuju
33. MEĐUNARODNU KONFERENCIJU
"IZAZOVI NOVIH TEHNOLOGIJA U FUNKCIJI MOBILNOSTI I ODRŽIVOG RAZVOJA"
15. - 16. maj 2026. godine
Free movement of persons (workers and citizens) in European Union law (besides the freedom of establishment, free movement of goods and services and the free movement of capital) is one of the four fundamental freedoms on which the European Union relies and its single market. Free movement of persons is presumed right for employment, residence, education and other activities of citizens from one to another state of the Union. Practically, it usually refers to the freedom of movement of workers, but also to their family members, which is one of the fundamental principles of the Union and a fundamental right in wich are enjoying its citizens. So, all the workers and citizens of the Union are entitled to the entry, movement and residence and the right to work, employment and residence in each of the states, which includes the elimination of discrimination based on the nationality of the workers, in regarding to employment, receipts of work and other conditions of work and employment. In addition, they and their family members are entitled to social, cultural and economic integration, including the right to employment of spouses, children's education and the similar. However, there are certain restrictions, especially the right for employment in the public sector, and in some members states limits are appling to citizens from the new member states. Accordingly, in this paper we will explicate the fundamental legal and the complementary aspects of the free movement of workers and citizens in the territory of the Union.
freedom of movement (people, workers, citizens), employment, family members, restrictions on freedom of movement, the transition period, the Schengen area
The statements, opinions and data contained in the journal are solely those of the individual authors and contributors and not of the publisher and the editor(s). We stay neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.