Migration, Recognition and Critical Theory

מידע ביבליוגרפי
מחבר תאגידי: SpringerLink (Online service)
מחברים אחרים: Schweiger, Gottfried (Editor)
סיכום:XI, 331 p. 1 illus.
text
שפה:אנגלית
יצא לאור: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2021.
מהדורה:1st ed. 2021.
סדרה:Studies in Global Justice, 21
נושאים:
גישה מקוונת:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-72732-1
פורמט: אלקטרוני ספר
תוכן הענינים:
  • Chapter 1. Recognition and Migration: a short Introduction (Gottfried Schweiger)
  • Part I: Recognition, Normative Theory and Migration
  • Chapter 2. What an Ethics of Discourse and Recognition Can Contribute to a Critical Theory of Refugee Claim Adjudication: Reclaiming Epistemic Justice for Gender-Based Asylum Seekers (David Ingram)
  • Chapter 3. Migration and the (selective) recognition of vulnerability. Reflections on solidarity between Judith Butler and the Critical Theory (Martin Huth)
  • Chapter 4. Transnationalizing recognition: a new grammar for an old problem (Gonçalo Marcelo)
  • Chapter 5. Transnational Struggle for Recognition: Axel Honneth on the Embodied Dignity of Stateless Persons (Odin Lysaker)
  • Chapter 6. Claims-Making and Recognition through Care Work: Narratives of Belonging and Exclusion of Filipinos in New York and London (Rizza Kaye C. Cases)
  • Part II: Recognition, Migration Policies and the State
  • Chapter 7. Work to be naturalized? On the relevance of Hegel’stheories of recognition, freedom and social integration for contemporary immigration debates (Simon L Joergensen)
  • Chapter 8. German and U.S. Borderlands: Recognition and the Copenhagen School in the Era of Hybrid Identities (Sabine Hirschauer)
  • Chapter 9. Recognition and civic selection (Onni Hirvonen)
  • Chapter 10. Managing invisibility: theoretical and practical contestations to disrespect (Benno Herzog)
  • Chapter 11. A Quest for Justice: Recognition and Migrant Interactions with Child Welfare Services in Norway (Alyssa Marie Kvalvaag & Gabriela Mezzanotti)
  • Part III: Recognition and Refugees
  • Chapter 12. Epistemic Injustice and Recognition Theory: What We Owe to Refugees (Hilke Hänel)
  • Chapter 13. Asylum and Reification (Heiko Berner)
  • Chapter 14. Structural misrecognition of migrants as a critical cosmopolitan moment (Zuzana Uhde).