The law of January 3, 1969 and the circulation booklet . Prior to January 2017, non-sedentary French citizens were required to hold a circulation permit in order to move freely within France. Describing this administrative document as an "internal passport" and the law of January 3, 1969 which instituted it as an "apartheid law", Olivier Le Mailloux, a lawyer representing a travelling showman holding a , referred the matter to the French
Constitutional Council. "Even though they are French, travellers still have to report regularly to the police station or gendarmerie," said the lawyer. The law of January 3, 1969 concerned people with no fixed domicile or residence of more than six months in a member state of the European Union. In its decision, handed down on October 5, 2012, the Constitutional Council followed his analysis, declaring the carnet de circulation contrary to the Constitution on the grounds that this travel document "disproportionately impaired the exercise of the freedom to come and go" and "unjustifiably restricted the exercise of civic rights". However, the Constitutional Court upheld the legislator's requirement for itinerant people to hold a "
livret de circulation", which was less coercive than the "
carnet de circulation". The abolition of by the Égalité et Citoyenneté law of January 27, 2017 was hailed as a step forward by the French Rights Defender, notably in his report on
gens du voyage "
Lever les entraves au droit" (lifting barriers to the law) (oct 2021). Olivier Le Mailloux continued the legal battle on behalf of the "
Gens du voyage" associations he was defending before the
Conseil d'Etat, arguing that the "
livrets de circulation" were contrary to the
European Convention on Human Rights. The Conseil d'Etat partially agreed with him, declaring the sanctions applicable to all those who did not hold a travel permit or who could not justify possession before the forces of law and order to be contrary to the European Convention on Human Rights. On October 28, 2016 in Montreuil-Bellay, the French President acknowledged France's responsibility for the internment of
gens du voyage during
World War II and inaugurated a memorial to the victims. On December 22, 2016, the French National Assembly definitively adopted the law on equality and citizenship, which repeals the law of January 3, 1969, thus putting an end to travelers' and the commune of attachment. The matter was referred to the French Constitutional Council. The law was promulgated on January 27, 2017.
The Besson laws The
1st "Besson" law of May 31, 1990 required towns with a population of over 5,000 to provide sites for nomads, which led to complex situations for towns close to this limit. The second "Besson" law, Law no. 2000-614 of July 5, 2000, further defined the rules. In March 2003, the law on internal security increased the penalties for illegal land occupation (six months' imprisonment and a 3,750 euro fine, seizure of motor vehicles and suspension of driving license). The November 7, 2018 law increased the penalties incurred to one year's imprisonment and a 7,500-euro fine. In November 2005, the French National Assembly passed the 2006
Finance Act making people living in mobile homes liable to property tax. The tax was reviewed in 2010 and definitively repealed in 2019. In 2018, following a bill, a new text modified the current rules in three areas: it clarified the role of the State, local authorities and their groupings, modified procedures for evacuating illegal parking sites, and strengthened criminal penalties.
La Commission nationale consultative des gens du voyage (CNCGDV) Created and set up in December 2015, under the mandate of
Sylvia Pinel, , the Commission nationale consultative des '
(CNCGDV), aims to adapt public policy to the reception, housing, support and culture of . It is part of a renewed inter-ministerial strategy concerning the situation of ', following on from the reflections and proposals of Prefect
Hubert Derache. The Commission was set up by the
Dihal (interministerial delegation for housing and access to housing for homeless or poorly housed people). == Living conditions ==