Description
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- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1. An Introduction to the Ethics of Migration
- Foundational Work on the Ethics of Migration
- Ways Forward
- Part I: Admissions
- 2. The New Open Borders Debate
- The Classical Open Borders Debate
- The New Open Borders Debate
- Conclusion
- 3. Exclusion, Discretion, and Justice
- Lori Watson: Migration and Subordination
- Douglas MacKay: Exclusion and Distribution
- Conclusion
- 4. The Place of Persecution and Non-State Action in Refugee Protection
- The Place of Persecution
- Persecution by Non-State Actors
- Usurpation by Non-State Actors and Inability to Provide State Protection
- Delegation of Authority and Unwillingness to Provide Protection
- Conclusion
- 5. Caring Relationships and Family Migration Schemes
- Ferracioli’s Theory: Protecting Irreplaceable Relationships Valued by Citizen and Society
- Lister’s Theory: Respecting the Right to Freedom of Intimate Association
- Immigration Policy and Dependent–Carer Relationships
- Immigration Policy and Intimate Caring Relationships between Independent Adults
- Conclusion
- 6. Temporary Labour Migration and Global Inequality
- Temporary Labour Migration Programmes (TLMP)
- Restricting Rights and Democratic Justice
- Closing Migration Opportunities
- Wealth Redistribution and the Development of Sustainably Just Political Communities
- Conclusion
- Part II: Enforcement and Its Effects
- 7. The Difference That Detention Makes: Reconceptualizing the Boundaries of the Normative Debate on Immigration Control
- Immigration Detention
- Immigration Detention Centres
- International Human Rights Law: Advances and Limitations for Detainees’ Access to Human Rights
- Detention and the Criminalization of Migration
- Who is the ‘Criminal Alien’?
- The Stateless: Subjects of Indefinite and Futile Detention
- Potential Solutions
- Conclusion
- 8. Rethinking Consent in Trafficking and Smuggling
- Smuggling and Trafficking: The Controversial Role of Consent
- Why We Cannot Do without Consent
- Rethinking Consent: Agency, Temporality, and the Constrained Choice of Means
- The Normative Consequences of (Re)defining Consent
- Conclusion
- Part III: Integration and Inclusion
- 9. Civic Integration: The Acceptable Face of Assimilation?
- The Political Context
- Liberal Citizenship and Its Obligations
- Republican Citizenship and Its Obligations
- Conclusion
- 10. Arguments for Regularization
- Some Initial Constraints
- The Humanitarian Argument
- The Contract Argument
- The Contribution Argument
- The Anti-Caste Argument
- The Affiliation Argument
- The Autonomy Argument
- Conclusion
- Part IV: New Directions for the Philosophy of Immigration
- 11. Migration and Feminist Care Ethics
- Migrant Women’s Care Work, Care Ethics, and the Challenge of Place
- Migrant Women
- Migrant Women and Care
- Taking Migrant Women’s Care Practices to Care Ethics
- Care Ethics and Dynamicity
- Conclusion
- 12. Illegal: White Supremacy and Immigration Status
- Three Faces of White Supremacy: Racism, Ethnocentrism, and Xenophobia
- A Nation of Immigrants
- Conclusion
- 13. Methodological Nationalism and the ‘Brain Drain’
- Five Puzzles: Conundrums about the ‘Brain Drain’ Discourse
- Pejorative and Dehumanizing Nature of Terminology
- Dubious Claims about Research
- Assumption of Wrongdoing
- Focus on Migration as Opposed to Other Causes
- Dubious Solutions
- Methodological Nationalism
- The Methodological Nationalism of the ‘Brain Drain’
- Political Nationalism
- Economic Territorialism
- Sedentariness
- Thinking about Skilled Migration without Methodological Nationalism
- Reject Sedentariness
- Rethink Borders
- Political Cosmopolitanism
- Bibliography
- Index
- About the Contributors




