On Immigration and Refugees
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:1st May '24
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The philosopher Michael Dummett was one of the sharpest and most prominent commentators and campaigners for the fair treatment of immigrants and refugees in Britain and Europe. On Immigration and Refugees was the only book he wrote on the topic and among one of the most eloquent and important reflections on the subject to have been published in many years. Exploring the confused and often highly unjust and racist thinking about immigration, Dummett questions the principles and justifications governing state policies, pointing out that they often conflict with the rights of refugees as laid down by the Geneva Convention. With compelling and often moving examples, he points a new way forward for humane thinking and practice about a problem we cannot afford to ignore.
This Routledge Classics edition includes a new Foreword by Sarah Fine.
“Makes the case meticulously ... a terrible indictment of modern British immigration policy.” - The Economist
“Passionately argued and shot through with a sense of urgency ... an invigorating read.” - The Tablet
“Acutely spots a blank in the mentality of earlier political philosophers who ‘have seldom asked what obligations a state has towards those who are not its citizens’, and argues powerfully against those who ‘hold that we have at most only negative duties towards strangers: that, for example, we may not kill them, but have no duty to protect them from being killed.’” - The Evening Standard
“A lucid philosophical discussion of the ethical principles at stake in matters of immigration and asylum, and a sharp review of the historical ways they have been manhandled.” - New Left Review
“Its greatest contribution is to demolish the arguments uses by politicians and the media, and to expose their implicit racism... It would be hard to find another short book which analyses the causes and development of racism so clearly, and shows the connivance in fostering racial prejudice of successive governments of all parties.” - Local Government Studies
“Makes the case meticulously ... a terrible indictment of modern British immigration policy.” - The Economist
“Passionately argued and shot through with a sense of urgency ... an invigorating read.” - The Tablet
“Acutely spots a blank in the mentality of earlier political philosophers who ‘have seldom asked what obligations a state has towards those who are not its citizens’, and argues powerfully against those who ‘hold that we have at most only negative duties towards strangers: that, for example, we may not kill them, but have no duty to protect them from being killed.’” - The Evening Standard
“A lucid philosophical discussion of the ethical principles at stake in matters of immigration and asylum, and a sharp review of the historical ways they have been manhandled.” - New Left Review
“Its greatest contribution is to demolish the arguments uses by politicians and the media, and to expose their implicit racism... It would be hard to find another short book which analyses the causes and development of racism so clearly, and shows the connivance in fostering racial prejudice of successive governments of all parties.” - Local Government Studies
ISBN: 9781032641621
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 335g
156 pages