The Rights of Others: Aliens, Residents, and CitizensCambridge University Press, 2004 M11 25 - 251 pages The Rights of Others examines the boundaries of political community by focusing on political membership. |
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Page 11
... specific addressees and they do not appear to anchor specific obligations on the part of second and third parties to comply with them . Despite the crossborder char- acter of these rights , the Declaration upholds the sovereignty of ...
... specific addressees and they do not appear to anchor specific obligations on the part of second and third parties to comply with them . Despite the crossborder char- acter of these rights , the Declaration upholds the sovereignty of ...
Page 13
... specific norms that can be deemed valid need to be tested through procedures that can meet this criterion . In my interpretation , this metanorm presupposes the principles of universal moral respect and egalitarian reciprocity ...
... specific norms that can be deemed valid need to be tested through procedures that can meet this criterion . In my interpretation , this metanorm presupposes the principles of universal moral respect and egalitarian reciprocity ...
Page 15
... specific ethical , cultural , and political communities , and unlike realists and postmodernists who are skeptical that political norms can ever be made subordinate to moral ones , the discourse ethicist insists upon the 15 INTRODUCTION.
... specific ethical , cultural , and political communities , and unlike realists and postmodernists who are skeptical that political norms can ever be made subordinate to moral ones , the discourse ethicist insists upon the 15 INTRODUCTION.
Page 16
... specific cultural , religious , and ethnic communities . And if we do not differentiate between morality and legality , we cannot criticize the legally enacted norms of democratic majorities even if they refuse to admit refugees to ...
... specific cultural , religious , and ethnic communities . And if we do not differentiate between morality and legality , we cannot criticize the legally enacted norms of democratic majorities even if they refuse to admit refugees to ...
Page 25
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Contents
On hospitality rereading Kants cosmopolitan right | 25 |
The right to have rights Hannah Arendt on the contradictions of the nationstate | 49 |
The Law of Peoples distributive justice and migrations | 71 |
Transformations of citizenship the European Union | 129 |
Democratic iterations the local the national and the global | 171 |
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Common terms and phrases
aliens Arendt argue Article asylees asylum seekers Beitz borders boundaries BVerfG Cambridge University Press citizens citizenship citizenship rights civic civil concept consociates contemporary cosmopolitan right countries democratic iterations democratic legitimacy democratic voice demos developments disaggregation discourse ethics economic empirical entitled equality ethnic Europe European Union foreigners French German Constitutional Court global justice grant Hannah Arendt historical human rights ideal immigration individuals institutions interdependence Kant Kant's Kantian laïcité liberal democracies liberal-democratic means Michael Walzer migration modern moral multicultural Muslim nation-state norms numbers obligations one's peoplehood Perpetual Peace persons philosophical Pogge political community political membership political rights practices precisely principle public sphere Rawls Rawls's Rawlsian refugees and asylum religious Republic republican sovereign residents right to membership rights claims rights regimes Seyla Benhabib social society sovereignty stateless stateless person status territory theory third-country nationals tion tional traditions transnational Treaty vision vote Walzer women
Popular passages
Page 7 - Discrimination, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights...
Page 11 - ... Despite the crossborder character of these rights, the Declaration upholds the sovereignty of individual states. Thus a series of internal contradictions between universal human rights and territorial sovereignty are built into the logic of the most comprehensive international law documents in our world. The Geneva Convention of 1951 Relating to the Status of Refugees and its Protocol added in 1967 are the second most important international legal documents governing crossborder movements.
Page 7 - Rights, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination...