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Resident Foreigners: A Philosophy of Migration [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 260 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x23 mm, kaal: 386 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 31-Jan-2020
  • Kirjastus: Polity Press
  • ISBN-10: 1509533559
  • ISBN-13: 9781509533558
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 260 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x23 mm, kaal: 386 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 31-Jan-2020
  • Kirjastus: Polity Press
  • ISBN-10: 1509533559
  • ISBN-13: 9781509533558
Teised raamatud teemal:

From the shores of Europe to the Mexican-US border, mass migration is one of the most pressing issues we face today. Yet at the same time, calls to defend national sovereignty are becoming ever more vitriolic, with those fleeing war, persecution, and famine vilified as a threat to our security as well as our social and economic order.

In this book, written amidst the dark resurgence of appeals to defend ‘blood and soil’, Donatella Di Cesare challenges the idea of the exclusionary state, arguing that migration is a fundamental human right.  She develops an original philosophy of migration that places the migrants themselves, rather than states and their borders, at the centre.  Through an analysis of three historic cities, Athens, Rome and Jerusalem, Di Cesare shows how we should conceive of migrants not as an other but rather as resident foreigners. This means recognising that citizenship cannot be based on any supposed connection to the land or an exclusive claim to ownership that would deny the rights of those who arrive as migrants. Instead, citizenship must be disconnected from the possession of territory altogether and founded on the principle of cohabitation – and on the ultimate reality that we are all temporary guests and tenants of the earth.

Di Cesare’s argument for a new ethics of hospitality will be of great interest to all those concerned with the challenges posed by migration and with the increasingly hostile attitudes towards migrants, as well as students and scholars of philosophy and political theory.

Arvustused

Deeply original, thoughtful and based on an incredible erudition, Donatella Di Cesares plea for a world in which all human beings would be resident foreigners is the best answer to the rise of racism, xenophobia and nationalism. Enzo Traverso, Cornell University

In this accessible and lively work, Di Cesare writes with knowledge and passion on one of the key systemic contradictions of capitalism. Highly recommended. Morning Star

theoretically deep and politically stimulating public philosophy at its best Contemporary Political Theory

Introduction: In Short 1(4)
1 Migrants and the State
5(73)
Ellis Island
5(4)
When the migrant unmasks the state
9(2)
The state-centric order
11(1)
A fundamental hostility
12(2)
Beyond sovereignty: a marginal note
14(2)
Philosophy and migration
16(3)
A shipwreck with an audience: on today's debate
19(3)
Thinking from the shore
22(3)
Migration and modernity
25(1)
Columbus and the image of the globe
26(3)
`We refugees': the scum of the Earth
29(6)
What rights for the stateless?
35(2)
The frontier of democracy
37(3)
The sovereigntism of closed borders
40(2)
Philosophers against Samaritans
42(4)
The primacy of citizens and the dogma of self-determination
46(2)
If the state were a club: liberalism based on exclusion
48(2)
The defence of national integrity
50(2)
Owning the land: a baseless myth
52(5)
Freedom of movement and birthright privileges
57(4)
Migrants against the poor? Welfare chauvinism and global justice
61(7)
Neither exodus, nor `deportation', nor `human trafficking'
68(1)
Ius migrandi: for the right to migrate
69(4)
Mare liberum and the sovereign's word
73(2)
Kant, the right to visit and residency denied
75(3)
2 The End of Hospitality?
78(50)
The continent of migrants
78(3)
`Us' and `them': the grammar of hatred
81(3)
Europe, 2015
84(5)
Hegel, the Mediterranean and the cemetery of the sea
89(2)
Fadoul's story
91(4)
`Refugees' and `migrants': impossible classifications
95(6)
The metamorphoses of the exile
101(2)
Asylum: from ambiguous right to a dispositif of power
103(3)
`You're not from here': an existential negation
106(2)
The migrant's original sin
108(2)
`Illegals': being condemned to invisibility
110(3)
The terms of domination: Integration' and `naturalization'
113(3)
When the immigrant remains an emigre
116(2)
The foreigner who lives outside, the foreigner who lives within
118(6)
Clandestine passages, heterotopias, anarchic routes
124(4)
3 Resident Foreigners
128(39)
On exile
128(3)
Neither rootlessness nor roaming without direction
131(1)
Phenomenology of habitation
132(3)
What does it mean to migrate?
135(4)
The global uprooting
139(1)
The earth-born': Athens and the myth of autochthony
140(7)
Rome: the city without origin and imperial citizenship
147(6)
The theological-political charter of the ger
153(5)
Jerusalem, the City of foreigners
158(5)
On return
163(4)
4 Living Together in the New Millennium
167(50)
The new age of walls
167(3)
Lampedusa: of what border is it the name?
170(5)
Condemned to immobility
175(2)
The world of the camps
177(3)
The passport, a paradoxical document
180(2)
`To each their own home!' Crypto-racism and the new Hitlerism
182(3)
Hospitality: in the impasse between ethics and politics
185(6)
Beyond citizenship
191(5)
The limits of cosmopolitanism
196(1)
Community, immunity, welcome
197(5)
When Europe drowned ...
202(3)
The power of place
205(3)
What does cohabiting mean?
208(5)
Resident foreigners
213(4)
Notes 217
Donatella Di Cesare is Professor of Theoretical Philosophy at the Sapienza University of Rome.