Being Here: Ethical Territoriality and the Rights of Immigrants
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Linda Bosniak
In this Article, I examine a normative idea of territoriality which I call ethical territoriality. By ethical territoriality, I mean the conviction that rights and recognition should extend to all persons who are territorially present within the geographical space of a national state simply by virtue of that presence. I start by briefly reprising a claim I have developed elsewhere — that territorialism is preferable, on liberal democratic grounds, to status-based approaches to immigrants’ rights. Here, though, I set out to interrogate the logic of ethical territoriality itself. I ask why the mere fact of a person’s territorial presence should serve as the basis for rights and recognition. Further, even conceding that it should, I ask how this commitment is to be operationalized. What is the scope of the territory in which presence figures so significantly in normative terms, and who, precisely, gets access to presence in that territory? My purpose in this Article is to get beyond the status vs. territorial presence-as-basis-for-membership dispute in the immigration debates and to begin a (self-) critical discussion of the ethical territorial commitment itself.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Article
- Who Is the Citizen's Other? Considering the Heft of Citizenship
- The Worth of Citizenship in an Unequal World
- Being Here: Ethical Territoriality and the Rights of Immigrants
- Spheres of Citizenship
- Why European Citizenship? Normative Approaches to Supranational Union
- Citizenship with a Vengeance
- Advancing Citizenship: The Legal Armory and Its Limits
- The Citizen and the Migrant: Postcolonial Anxieties, Law, and the Politics of Exclusion/Inclusion
- The Culture of Citizenship
- Citizenship Betrayed: Israel's Emerging Immigration and Citizenship Regime
- (In)Security and Citizenship: Security, Im/migration and Shrinking Citizenship Regimes
- Managing Migration, Reprioritizing National Citizenship: Undocumented Migrant Workers' Children and Policy Reforms in Israel
- Why Citizenship: Where, When and How Children?
- Industrial Citizenship, Social Citizenship, Corporate Citizenship: I Just Want My Wages
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Article
- Who Is the Citizen's Other? Considering the Heft of Citizenship
- The Worth of Citizenship in an Unequal World
- Being Here: Ethical Territoriality and the Rights of Immigrants
- Spheres of Citizenship
- Why European Citizenship? Normative Approaches to Supranational Union
- Citizenship with a Vengeance
- Advancing Citizenship: The Legal Armory and Its Limits
- The Citizen and the Migrant: Postcolonial Anxieties, Law, and the Politics of Exclusion/Inclusion
- The Culture of Citizenship
- Citizenship Betrayed: Israel's Emerging Immigration and Citizenship Regime
- (In)Security and Citizenship: Security, Im/migration and Shrinking Citizenship Regimes
- Managing Migration, Reprioritizing National Citizenship: Undocumented Migrant Workers' Children and Policy Reforms in Israel
- Why Citizenship: Where, When and How Children?
- Industrial Citizenship, Social Citizenship, Corporate Citizenship: I Just Want My Wages