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Items
Details
Author
Title
Resident Foreigners : A Philosophy of Migration.
Imprint
Newark : Polity Press, 2020.
Description
1 online resource (241 p.)
Formatted Contents Note
Cover
Title page
Copyright page
Contents
Introduction: In Short
1 Migrants and the State
1 Ellis Island
2 When the migrant unmasks the state
3 The state-centric order
4 A fundamental hostility
5 Beyond sovereignty: a marginal note
6 Philosophy and migration
7 A shipwreck with an audience: on today's debate
8 Thinking from the shore
9 Migration and modernity
10 Columbus and the image of the globe
11 'We refugees': the scum of the Earth
12 What rights for the stateless?
13 The frontier of democracy
14 The sovereigntism of closed borders
15 Philosophers against Samaritans
16 The primacy of citizens and the dogma of self-determination
17 If the state were a club: liberalism based on exclusion
18 The defence of national integrity
19 Owning the land: a baseless myth
20 Freedom of movement and birthright privileges
21 Migrants against the poor? Welfare chauvinism and global justice
22 Neither exodus, nor 'deportation', nor 'human trafficking'
23 Ius migrandi: for the right to migrate
24 Mare liberum and the sovereign's word
25 Kant, the right to visit and residency denied
2 The End of Hospitality?
1 The continent of migrants
2 'Us' and 'them': the grammar of hatred
3 Europe 2015
4 Hegel, the Mediterranean and the cemetery of the sea
5 Fadoul's story
6 'Refugees' and 'migrants': impossible classifications
7 The metamorphoses of the exile
8 Asylum: from ambiguous right to a dispositif of power
9 'You're not from here': an existential negation
10 The migrant's original sin
11 'Illegals': being condemned to invisibility
12 The terms of domination: 'integration' and 'naturalization'
13 When the immigrant remains an émigré
14 The foreigner who lives outside, the foreigner who lives within
15 Clandestine passages, heterotopias, anarchic routes
3 Resident Foreigners
1 On exile
2 Neither rootlessness nor roaming without direction
3 Phenomenology of habitation
4 What does it mean to migrate?
5 The global uprooting
6 'The earth-born': Athens and the myth of autochthony
7 Rome: the city without origin and imperial citizenship
8 The theological-political charter of the ger
9 Jerusalem, the City of foreigners
10 On return
4 Living Together in the New Millennium
1 The new age of walls
2 Lampedusa: of what border is it the name?
3 Condemned to immobility
4 The world of the camps
5 The passport: a paradoxical document
6 'To each their own home!' Crypto-racism and the new Hitlerism
7 Hospitality: in the impasse between ethics and politics
8 Beyond citizenship
9 The limits of cosmopolitanism
10 Community, immunity, welcome
11 When Europe drowned
12 The power of place
13 What does cohabiting mean?
14 Resident foreigners
Notes
Notes to Chapter 1
Notes to Chapter 2
Notes to Chapter 3
Notes to Chapter 4
Title page
Copyright page
Contents
Introduction: In Short
1 Migrants and the State
1 Ellis Island
2 When the migrant unmasks the state
3 The state-centric order
4 A fundamental hostility
5 Beyond sovereignty: a marginal note
6 Philosophy and migration
7 A shipwreck with an audience: on today's debate
8 Thinking from the shore
9 Migration and modernity
10 Columbus and the image of the globe
11 'We refugees': the scum of the Earth
12 What rights for the stateless?
13 The frontier of democracy
14 The sovereigntism of closed borders
15 Philosophers against Samaritans
16 The primacy of citizens and the dogma of self-determination
17 If the state were a club: liberalism based on exclusion
18 The defence of national integrity
19 Owning the land: a baseless myth
20 Freedom of movement and birthright privileges
21 Migrants against the poor? Welfare chauvinism and global justice
22 Neither exodus, nor 'deportation', nor 'human trafficking'
23 Ius migrandi: for the right to migrate
24 Mare liberum and the sovereign's word
25 Kant, the right to visit and residency denied
2 The End of Hospitality?
1 The continent of migrants
2 'Us' and 'them': the grammar of hatred
3 Europe 2015
4 Hegel, the Mediterranean and the cemetery of the sea
5 Fadoul's story
6 'Refugees' and 'migrants': impossible classifications
7 The metamorphoses of the exile
8 Asylum: from ambiguous right to a dispositif of power
9 'You're not from here': an existential negation
10 The migrant's original sin
11 'Illegals': being condemned to invisibility
12 The terms of domination: 'integration' and 'naturalization'
13 When the immigrant remains an émigré
14 The foreigner who lives outside, the foreigner who lives within
15 Clandestine passages, heterotopias, anarchic routes
3 Resident Foreigners
1 On exile
2 Neither rootlessness nor roaming without direction
3 Phenomenology of habitation
4 What does it mean to migrate?
5 The global uprooting
6 'The earth-born': Athens and the myth of autochthony
7 Rome: the city without origin and imperial citizenship
8 The theological-political charter of the ger
9 Jerusalem, the City of foreigners
10 On return
4 Living Together in the New Millennium
1 The new age of walls
2 Lampedusa: of what border is it the name?
3 Condemned to immobility
4 The world of the camps
5 The passport: a paradoxical document
6 'To each their own home!' Crypto-racism and the new Hitlerism
7 Hospitality: in the impasse between ethics and politics
8 Beyond citizenship
9 The limits of cosmopolitanism
10 Community, immunity, welcome
11 When Europe drowned
12 The power of place
13 What does cohabiting mean?
14 Resident foreigners
Notes
Notes to Chapter 1
Notes to Chapter 2
Notes to Chapter 3
Notes to Chapter 4
Note
Description based upon print version of record.
Available in Other Form
Print version: Di Cesare, Donatella Resident Foreigners : A Philosophy of Migration Newark : Polity Press,c2020
Linked Resources
Language
English
ISBN
9781509533565 (electronic book)
1509533567
1509533567
Record Appears in