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Call for Papers

Theme: Refugees and minority rights
Subtitle: Acceptable and unacceptable criteria for
accepting/rejecting refugees in a non-ideal world
Type: International Conference
Institution: Globalizing Minority Rights (GMR) Research Project,
Norwegian Research Council
   Pluralism, Democracy, and Justice (PDJ) Research Group and
Department of Philosophy, University of Tromsø
Location: Tromsø (Norway)
Date: 14.–15.6.2018
Deadline: 15.1.2018

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Faced with the worst displacement crisis since the second world war,
many states are unlikely to accept as many refugees as they ought,
and very few are likely to accept more than they are required. So
though some refugees will be admitted, many with sound claims will
thus be wrongfully rejected. Are some ways of wrongfully rejecting
refugees less objectionable than others? If “yes”, is it then morally
justifiable to give priority to refugees who flee from worse forms
discrimination or persecution of minority groups than refugees who
flee less severe forms of discrimination?  

In the abstract this might seem like a reasonable position. Yet, many
have found it objectionable to give priority to Christian refugees
from the Middle East – especially without a similar scheme for Muslim
refugees from countries where they experience comparable forms of
discrimination. Furthermore, giving priority to refugees on the basis
of the degree to which they experience discrimination and prosecution
in the countries from which they flee might involve drastic
divergences from present patterns of asylum admittances. For
instance, given the widespread and severe discrimination women and
homosexuals face in many parts of the world, should such refugees be
given priority, considering fewer men and heterosexuals would then be
admitted?

Some might reject the very idea of sorting refugees who all merit
asylum into different groups – triage for refugees as it were. And
some may instead reject the particular principle of risk of
persecution for the distribution of asylum, on the basis of this
principle’s implications. If so, which alternative or additional
principles should regulate the admission of refugees? 

This conference aims to tackle such issues by addressing the
question: What role ought minority protection play, and, more
generally, what are the right principles of admitting and rejecting
refugees when asylum, whether permanent or temporary, is
under-supplied in a non-ideal world? What are the implications for
the present situation given the correct answer to the previous
questions? And should we at all consider prioritizing among refugees?
If not, why not? 

How to submit:

300-500 word abstracts should be sent to
[email protected]

by 15 January 2018.

Notifications of acceptance will be sent during February 2018.

Full papers are to be circulated in advance, by 4 June 2018.

The organizing committee, led by Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen (Aarhus &
UiT) and Annamari Vitikainen (UiT), will invite selected papers to
participate in a special symposium, to be published after the
conference.

Keynote speakers:

David Miller (Oxford)
Sarah Fine (KCL)
Serena Parekh (Northeastern)
Kieran Oberman (Edinburgh)
Lea Ypi (LSE)
Phillip Cole (UWE)

Organizers:

- Globalizing Minority Rights: Cosmopolitanism, Global Institutions,
  and Cultural Justice (GMR) research project
  (www.uit.no/research/gmr) / Norwegian Research Council (NFR 259017)
- Pluralism, Democracy, and Justice (PDJ) research group
  (www.uit.no/pdj), University of Tromsø
- Department of Philosophy, University of Tromsø – The Arctic
  University of Norway.


Contact:

Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen and Annamari Vitikainen
Organizing Committee "Refugees and minority rights"
University of Tromsø
Email: [email protected]
Web:
https://uit.no/prosjekter/prosjektsub?p_document_id=490770&sub_id=530082




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