Globalizing Minority Rights

Papers

The papers are password protected and alphabetically ordered by author. Click on the name and type in the password to access paper.

Aronson, Daniil: 

“A Right to Have Rights”: Political Measures to Make the Refugee Crisis Ethically Relevant
Beaton, Eilidh: 
Should ability to integrate influence refugee admissions policy?
Bender, Felix:
Just and unjust criteria for determining refugee status: The case for shifting from individual persecution to political oppression
Bengtson, Andreas:
Closing Borders ‘Hypocritically’: Brain Drain, Speaker Position and Hypocrisy
Bhatia, Udit:
The Global South and its Hermeneutical Duty to Asylum Seekers
Bodström, Erna M S:
Are we doing enough? Asylum assessment as symbolic gate-keeping
Buechel, Benedikt:
From the value of a territory to two principles for a fairer distribution of would-be immigrants in need
Cawston, A.M.:
Who Decides? An Argument for Democratic Selection Criteria for Refugees
Cherem, Max G.:
Background conditions of acceptability for prioritizing refugees
Cole, Phillip:
Climate Change and Global Displacement: Towards an Ethical Response?
De Vries, Bouke:
Admitting refugees: Is it permissible for states to prioritise liberal-minded refugees?
Duarte, Melina:
Should high greenhouse gas emitting countries be required to admit and resettle more climate displacees than low greenhouse gas emitting countries?
Fine, Sarah:
Refugees and the Limits of Political Philosophy
Gerver, Mollie:
QALYs and Selecting Refugees
Gudovitch, Rami:
Refugees- Why Prioritizing is Wrong
Hillier-smith, Bradley:
Is it morally justifiable to give priority to refugees who are suffering as a result of severe human rights violations?
Iida, Fumio:
Can liberal states treat political and economic refugees alike?
Ivanovic, Mladjo:
Humanitarian Melancholia: Humanitarianism and the Need for Morality of Thinking.

 
Kapelner, Zsolt Kristof:
Minority rights and democratic legitimacy in regulating refugee admission
Larrucea, Maria Constanza Vera :
Who should protect and who should be protected? The European puzzle.
Lenard, Patti:
Private sponsorship of refugees: The pros and cons of permitting citizens to select refugees for admission and resettlement
Lindauer, Matthew:
Domestic Justice and Refugee Prioritization
Lippert-Rasmussen, Kasper & Sune Lægaard:
Refugees and minorities: Some conceptual issues
Lysaker, Odin:
Childhoods Put on Hold: A Waiting Guarantee for Vulnerable Unaccompanied Minors’ Prolonged Displacement
Mazzola, Dario:
Towards a Refugee-Centered Approach to Distribution
Miller, David:
Selecting Refugees
Oberman, Kieran:
Refugee Discrimination – The Good, the Bad and the Politically Expedient
Parekh, Serena:
The Refugee Crisis Needs a New Frame: We are Not Rescuers
Romano, Benedetta:
I belong therefore I am: Immigrants, National Identity, and Feeling of Belonging
Ross, Alec:
Rethinking Prioritization Among Refugees in a Non-Ideal World
Schweiger, Gottfried:
Should we prioritize child refugees?
Servan, Johannes:
‘What justice requires’ – state-centric and cosmopolitan perspectives on priority criteria in resettlement policies.
Shahvisi, Arianne:
Existence precedes nascence: an argument for accepting greater numbers of refugees
Slater, Gary:
From Sacer to Sanctus: Against Prioritizing Among Refugees
Syring, Tom:
Refugee and Minority Protection between Legal and Moral Obligations
Vitikainen, Annamari:
LGBT Rights and Refugees: A case for prioritizing LGBT status in refugee admissions
Ypi, Lea:
Irregular migration, adverse possession and the justification of the right to exclude



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Last updated: 02.10.2023 10:50