
A Right to Inclusion and Exclusion?
Normative Fault Lines of the EU's Area of Freedom, Security and Justice
Hans Lindahl(Editor)
Hart Publishing
Published on 14. August 2009
Book
Hardback
298 pages
978-1-84113-949-4 (ISBN)
Description
This volume of essays, situated at the interface between legal doctrine and legal and political philosophy, discusses the conceptual and normative issues posed by the right to inclusion and exclusion the EU claims for itself when enacting and enforcing immigration and asylum policy under the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice. In particular, the essays probe how this alleged right acquires institutional form; how the enactment and enforcement of the EU's external borders render possible and undermine the claim to such a right; and how the fundamental distinctions that underpin this alleged right, such as inside/outside and citizen/alien, are being disrupted and reconfigured in ways that might render the EU's civic and territorial boundaries more porous. The volume is divided into three parts. A first set of essays delves into the empirical aspects that define the institutional context of the EU's alleged jus includendi et excludendi. A second set of essays is theoretical in character, and critically scrutinizes the basic distinctions that govern this alleged right.
The third set of essays discusses politico-legal alternatives, exploring how the conceptual and normative problems to which this alleged right gives rise might be dealt with, both legally and politically. The contributors to the volume are Peter Fitzpatrick, Bonnie Honig, Dora Kostakopoulou, Hans Lindahl, Valsamis Mitsilegas, Helen Oosterom-Staples, Bert van Roermund, Jo Shaw, Bernhard Waldenfels, Neil Walker and Ricard Zapata Barrero. The volume also includes a comprehensive introduction by the editor, highlighting systematic connections between the three parts and individual essays which comprise it.
The third set of essays discusses politico-legal alternatives, exploring how the conceptual and normative problems to which this alleged right gives rise might be dealt with, both legally and politically. The contributors to the volume are Peter Fitzpatrick, Bonnie Honig, Dora Kostakopoulou, Hans Lindahl, Valsamis Mitsilegas, Helen Oosterom-Staples, Bert van Roermund, Jo Shaw, Bernhard Waldenfels, Neil Walker and Ricard Zapata Barrero. The volume also includes a comprehensive introduction by the editor, highlighting systematic connections between the three parts and individual essays which comprise it.
Reviews / Votes
The entire set of contributions give food for thought as they exhaustively question key political and legal concepts and fundamental distinctions that have traditionally governed immigration and asylum policy. Laurent Pech Galway Common Market Law Review Volume 47, Issue 2More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 21 mm
Weight
617 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-84113-949-4 (9781841139494)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Hans Lindahl
A Right to Inclusion and Exclusion?
Normative Fault Lines of the Eu's Area of Freedom, Security and Justice
E-Book
08/2009
1st Edition
Hart Publishing
€111.99
Available for download
Person
Hans Lindahl is Professor of Legal Philosophy at Tilburg University, the Netherlands.
Content
Introduction: A Circularity and its Ramifications I. Institutional Context 1. Political Discourses about Borders: On the Emergence of a European Political Community RICARD ZAPATA-BARRERO 2. The Borders Paradox: The Surveillance of Movement in a Union without Internal Frontiers VALSAMIS MITSILEGAS 3. Effective Rights for Third-Country Nationals? HELEN OOSTEROM-STAPLES II. Theoretical Issues 4. Phenomenology of Space: Being Here and Elsewhere BERNHARD WALDENFELS 5. Finding Normativity: Immigration Policy and Normative Formation PETER FITZPATRICK 6. Breaking Promises to Keep Them: Immigration and the Boundaries of Distributive Justice HANS LINDAHL 7. Migrants, Humans and Human Rights: The Right to Move as the Right to Stay BERT VAN ROERMUND III. Politico-Legal Alternatives 8. The Area of Freedom, Security and Justice and the Political Morality of Migration and Integration DORA KOSTAKOPOULOU 9. Proximity and Paradox: Law and Politics in the New Europe BONNIE HONIG 10. Citizenship and Electoral Rights in the Multi-Level 'Euro-Polity': The Case of The United Kingdom JO SHAW 11. Denizenship and Deterritorialisation in the European Union NEIL WALKER