Beyond reason: the philosophy and politics of immigration

被引:9
作者
Cole, Phillip [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ West England, Polit & Int Relat, Polit & Int Dev, Bristol, Avon, England
[2] Univ South Wales, Appl Philosophy Social Ethics Res Grp, Pontypridd, M Glam, Wales
关键词
immigration; nation-state; unreason; borders;
D O I
10.1080/13698230.2014.919058
中图分类号
D0 [政治学、政治理论];
学科分类号
0302 ; 030201 ;
摘要
In this paper, I critically address the role of arbitrary and contingent features in philosophical debates about migration. These features play a central role, and display the importance of 'unreason' in the debate and the limits of rational criticism. Certain elements of political thought have to be taken as given, as essential starting points or indispensable building blocks. As such, they cannot be exposed to rational criticism. Political arrangements such as national borders, nation-states and national identities constitute these building blocks, and justify coercive borders in order to sustain them. If we are to subject these arrangements to critical examination, then we move beyond the limits of liberal political philosophy. I examine theorists who take this kind of approach to the ethics of immigration: Michael Blake, Samuel Scheffler and David Miller. I argue that such approaches ask us to balance arbitrary and contingent features of the political world against the non-contingent moral equality of the migrant. If we are to recognize the migrant as an equal reason-giver in the moral contestation of borders, then we are compelled to theorize beyond these limits, and to theorize instead about a global community of equals, a post-national world made up of transnational belonging.
引用
收藏
页码:503 / 520
页数:18
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