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Justice, Migration, and Mercy (Paperback)
Loot Price: R573
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Justice, Migration, and Mercy (Paperback)
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Was R628
Loot Price R573
Discovery Miles 5 730
You Save R55 (9%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Total price: R583
Discovery Miles: 5 830
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Political controversy about migration is becoming more frequent,
more heated, and for certain groups, decidedly more urgent. This
raises pressing questions not only in the realms of policy-making
and public discourse, but also for philosophical accounts of
migration. Do liberal states have the right to exclude unwanted
outsiders, or should all borders be open? How should we begin to
theorize the morality of refugee and asylum policy? If states can
exclude unwanted outsiders, what ethical principles govern the
determination of who gets in? Justice, Migration, and Mercy offers
a way in which these questions might be answered by providing a
vision of how we can understand the political morality of
migration. Michael Blake offers a novel, and plausible, account of
the right to exclude on which that right is grounded on a more
fundamental right to avoid unwanted forms of political
relationship. Far from simply justifying exclusion, however, Blake
examines the best justifications for exclusion in an effort to
determine its limits. In doing so, he challenges the current global
realities of migration which ensure open borders for a select few
and closed borders for the majority, most often the most
marginalized in society. His account sheds light on more specific
questions of justice in migration, such as the permissibility of
travel bans and carrier sanctions. He also offers a particular
vision about how to go beyond questions of right and liberal
justice, towards a declaration of the sort of community we wish to
be. Blake then identifies the moral notion of mercy as a central
one for the moral analysis of migration, a move which leads to the
conclusion that we ought to show mercy and justice in constructing
migration policy as well as in public debate.
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