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1 Amsterdam L.F. 1 (2008-2009)

handle is hein.journals/amslawf1 and id is 1 raw text is: amsterdamlawforum
VU University Amsterdam
ETHICAL TERRITORIALITY AND THE RIGHTS OF
IMMIGRANTS
Linda Bosniak*
I want to talk today about normative idea which I have called ethical
territoriality. I use the term ethical territoriality to mean the conviction
that a person's physical presence within the territory of a state - whether a
national or supranational state-should be the basis for extending them
important rights and recognition.
What I would like to do is examine commitment to ethical territoriality
that is often found in liberal legal and political thought (both academic and
popular) and raise some questions about it. I will ask why the simple fact of a
person's presence in a national state's territory should serve to ground rights
and recognition there, and what the implications are of thinking about things
in this way. And throughout my remarks, I will be especially concerned to
link the ethical territoriality argument to debates about rights of irregular
immigrants-people who are within the territory of a state without formal
permission.
To begin, though, I need to set the stage by setting out what the ethical
territoriality argument is, where it comes from, and why it matters.
So let us start with following query. Who is it that we understand to be
entitled to rights and recognition in a liberal democratic state? Who are the
proper subjects of regard and protection? Who are the individuals we treat as
basic legal subjects?
One conventional answer to this question is that state's citizens are. In
fact, this has been the dominant answer in contemporary political theory:
citizens of the state are the fundamental subjects of liberal democratic
membership-of regard and recognition and claims-making: In the U.S.,
American citizens; in Europe, European citizens.
And this is hardly a controversial position, right? It seems to make
intuitive sense that citizens of a state, by virtue of that citizenship, should be
the principal subjects of regard and recognition there. In this account,
citizenship is the fundamental subject position in a political democracy. On
this account, we say citizenship is essential because it is the right to have
rights.
And yet, this citizenship answer begs some questions of its own.
For one thing, from a global perspective, assignment of citizenship status is
morally quite arbitrary. How does one obtain citizenship? More often than
not, by way of circumstances of birth (having to do with where you are born,
or to whom). And access to citizenship status post-natally (via naturalisation)
is in most states highly restricted. As a result, there are important questions
of moral theory about why it should be legitimate to grant privileged
Professor Rutgers School of Law, Camden, United States. Paperprepared for the conference 'Inclusion
and Exclusion in Western Immzgration which was held at the VU Universit Amsterdam, September
26, 2008.

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