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Migration Ethics
Kieran Oberman
7 episodes
3 days ago
Migration is one the most controversial topics in public life. It raises urgent ethical questions about how political communities treat outsiders. For a long time, ethicists had nothing to say about the subject but fortunately that's changing. Migration ethics is a fast developing field at the intersection of philosophy and migration studies. The Migration Ethics podcast interviews leading thinkers within that field. It explores the ethical problems migration raises and the ethical principles that might guide our path. Cover art by Raphael Perez.
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Philosophy
Society & Culture
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All content for Migration Ethics is the property of Kieran Oberman and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Migration is one the most controversial topics in public life. It raises urgent ethical questions about how political communities treat outsiders. For a long time, ethicists had nothing to say about the subject but fortunately that's changing. Migration ethics is a fast developing field at the intersection of philosophy and migration studies. The Migration Ethics podcast interviews leading thinkers within that field. It explores the ethical problems migration raises and the ethical principles that might guide our path. Cover art by Raphael Perez.
Show more...
Philosophy
Society & Culture
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Rufaida Al Hashmi on Immigration and Historical Injustice
Migration Ethics
23 minutes 23 seconds
3 years ago
Rufaida Al Hashmi on Immigration and Historical Injustice

In 1882, the US government passed the Chinese Exclusion Act banning the entry of Chinese people into the United States. The act was the product of a decades long campaign by white nativists against the influx of Chinese workers to California. It was the first act in US history to exclude people on grounds of race. Looking back, the Chinese Exclusion Act seems clearly unjust. Immigration policy should not discriminate on racial grounds. But if the Chinese Exclusion Act was unjust, does this have any implications for immigration policy in the present day? Rufaida Al Hashmi, from Oxford University, believes so. She thinks that unjust restrictions in the past can ground a right to admission in the present. In her view, we can and should use immigration policy to help correct historic wrongs. But how can wrongs committed against people who are now long dead ground rights for present populations? Who exactly has these rights and how can we identify them? And why is immigration a good means to correct historic wrongs when current populations may have no desire to migrate?

Rufaida Al Hashmi is a doctoral student at Nuffield College, Oxford. Her article, Historical Injustice in Immigration Policy, was published in Political Studies in 2021. 

Cover art by Raphael Perez.

Migration Ethics
Migration is one the most controversial topics in public life. It raises urgent ethical questions about how political communities treat outsiders. For a long time, ethicists had nothing to say about the subject but fortunately that's changing. Migration ethics is a fast developing field at the intersection of philosophy and migration studies. The Migration Ethics podcast interviews leading thinkers within that field. It explores the ethical problems migration raises and the ethical principles that might guide our path. Cover art by Raphael Perez.