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Migration as decolonization
Achiume, E. Tendayi
Stanford law review, 2019-06, Vol.71 (6), p.1509-1574
[Periódico revisado por pares]
Stanford: Stanford Law School
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Título:
Migration as decolonization
Autor:
Achiume, E. Tendayi
Assuntos:
COLONIALISM
;
Decolonization
;
Developing countries
;
Economic aspects
;
Economic conditions
;
Emigration and immigration
;
Ethics
;
Exceptionalism
;
History
;
HUMAN RIGHTS
;
IMMIGRATION
;
Immigration policy
;
Influence
;
International law
;
International law and human rights
;
LDCs
;
Legal status, laws, etc
;
Methods
;
MIGRANTS
;
Migration
;
Nation states
;
Noncitizens
;
Political aspects
;
Politics
;
Refugees
;
Social aspects
;
SOVEREIGNTY
;
Studies
;
Transnationalism
É parte de:
Stanford law review, 2019-06, Vol.71 (6), p.1509-1574
Notas:
2019-07-26T18:22:09+10:00
Stanford Law Review, Vol. 71, No. 6, Jun 2019, 1509-1574
STANFORD LAW REVIEW, Vol. 71, No. 6, Jun 2019: 1509-1574
Informit, Melbourne (Vic)
Descrição:
International migration is a defining problem of our time, and central to this problem are the ethical intuitions that dominate thinking on migration and its governance. This Article challenges existing approaches to one particularly contentious form of international migration, as an important first step toward a novel and more ethical way of approaching problems of the movement of people across national borders. The prevailing doctrine of state sovereignty under international law today is that it entails the right to exclude nonnationals, with only limited exceptions. Whatever the scope of these exceptions, so-called economic migrants-those whose movement is motivated primarily by a desire for a better life-are typically beyond them. Whereas international refugee law and international human rights law impose restrictions on states' right to exclude nonnationals whose lives are endangered by the risk of certain forms of persecution in their countries of origin, no similar protections exist for economic migrants. International legal theorists have not fundamentally challenged this formulation of state sovereignty, which justifies the assertion of a largely unfettered right to exclude economic migrants.
Editor:
Stanford: Stanford Law School
Idioma:
Inglês
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