Strangers in our midst : the political philosophy of immigration
By: Miller, David.
Material type: BookPublisher: USA : President and Fellows of Harvard College , 2016Description: 218 pages ; 25 cm.ISBN: 9780674088900 (alk. paper).Subject(s): Emigration and immigration -- Political aspects | -- Philosophy | -- Government policy | Immigrants | -- Civil rights | Human rightsDDC classification: 325.101Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due |
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Non Fiction | BardBerlinLibrary 2nd floor | 325.101 MILL 2016 (Browse shelf) | Available |
Browsing BardBerlinLibrary Shelves , Shelving location: 2nd floor Close shelf browser
325 KOS 2011 Global mobility regimes / | 325 KUS 2018 Identities in Flux : | 325.094 OLT 2016 Handbuch Staat und Migration in Deutschland seit dem 17. Jahrhundert / | 325.101 MILL 2016 Strangers in our midst : | 325.109 CAP 2020 The Routledge handbook of the governance of migration and diversity in cities | 325 2015 In our own words : | 325 2018 We exist, we are here : |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction -- Cosmopolitanism, compatriot partiality, and human rights -- Open borders -- Closed borders -- Refugees -- Economic migrants -- The rights of immigrants -- Integrating immigrants -- Conclusion.
"How should we, citizens of rich countries, respond to the claims of the many millions of people world-wide who want to immigrate and settle in our societies? Their reasons are often compelling - they are fleeing mass poverty or political persecution - but the impact that fully open borders would have on the life of the societies that the immigrants would join is also immense. This books defends democratic states' rights to control their borders, and powerfully criticizes the arguments offered in support of international freedom of movement - common ownership of the earth, global equality of opportunity, and the human right to immigrate. It explains why states have rights over territory that permit them to exclude outsiders, and why democracies are entitled to decide who they will accept as future citizens. But it also sets out the parameters of a just immigration policy."--Provided by publisher.
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