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Call for Papers

Theme: The Ethics of Migration beyond the Immigrant-Host State Nexus
Type: International Conference
Institution: European University Institute
Location: Florence (Italy)
Date: 11.–12.1.2018
Deadline: 1.10.2017

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Over the last three decades, normative political theorists have
devoted much attention to the issue of migration. However, most of
this literature has singularly focused on the relationship between
individual migrants and their state of destination. The debate
centres on two sets of questions. The first is whether states have a
right to keep would-be immigrants out or whether, conversely,
migrants have a right to cross international borders. The second is
whether states have a duty to extend citizenship or more limited
packages of rights to migrants living in their territory and whether
those migrants have a duty to integrate into their host society. Yet
the constellation of actors involved in regulating international
mobility comprises many more stakeholders. These include, among
others, migrants’ countries of origin; subnational and supranational
levels of government (such as municipalities, provinces and regional
unions); sedentary citizens; commercial companies; and civil society
organisations such as trade unions, churches, NGOs and activist
groups.

Recent developments illustrate the importance of considering the
rights and duties of these actors in their various relationships. The
influence that increasingly assertive sending states seek to exert
over their diasporas has prompted questions about the rights and
duties of such states in relation to their expatriate populations as
well as the states that host them. The sharp tightening of
immigration controls, particularly in Trump’s America and on the
eastern and southern borders of the European Union, has raised
questions about the rights and duties of ordinary citizens and civil
society organisations to resist and frustrate unjust migration
policies and practices. And the unprecedented scale of the refugee
crisis in the Middle East and Europe has foregrounded questions of
burden-sharing between host countries and the right of supranational
institutions to enforce shared duties of assistance.

This conference provides a forum to explore these and related
normative questions. We welcome contributions from, among others, the
fields of political theory, moral philosophy, social science and law.
Possible topics include (but are not limited to):

- Responsibility-sharing in refugee protection
- The right to control emigration
- Responsibilities towards expatriate citizens
- The ethics of diaspora politics
- The role of subnational governments and supranational institutions
  in migration regimes
- The role of non-state actors in migration management
- The ethics of resisting migration controls
- Migration and interpersonal morality

Confirmed speakers include Michael Blake (Washington), Valeria
Ottonelli (Genova), David Owen (Southampton), Ayelet Shachar
(MPI-MMG) and Rainer Bauböck (EUI). 

Please submit the title and brief abstract (300 words) of your
proposed paper to [email protected] together with your name and
affiliation by 1 October 2017. Notifications of acceptance will be
sent out by 16 October 2017. Those invited are expected to submit
full draft papers at least two weeks before the conference.
Conference participation will be free of charge. Unfortunately, we
will not be able to cover travel and accommodation costs.

For more information, contact:
[email protected]

See the full CFP here:
https://www.eui.eu/Images-2011/SPS/News/Call-for-Papers.jpg




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