The course focuses on some crucial issues of the ethics and politics of migration that are salient in the contemporary philosophical debate.
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This course aims to give participants a conceptual toolbox to master contemporary debates about social behaviours, ideology, and forms of emancipation. The course will examine the consequences and responses to forms of political, social and economic domination. We will go on to read and discuss key texts and debates in social theory. This course will provide students with the vocabulary and conceptual tools to navigate public and scholarly debates about power, inclusion, emancipation, as well as foundational discussions about individuals and structures.
The course is intended to provide students with
The course will be held in English. Students are expected to read articles and comment on selected passages in English.
Lectures, class discussions (debate), problem-based learning, flipped classroom, didatics by cases and problems.
During the course we will analize and discuss some crucial normative issues raised by migratory movements: is there a universal right to migrate? Which rights do migrants have after admission within the borders of the receiving state? What are the requirements for naturalisation? What is the difference between voluntary and forced migratio, and how is this distinction relevant to migratory policies? What is owed to refugees? Do states have the right to control emigration? Are there legitimate remedies to brain drain? Do people have a right not to emigrate?
Two texts among the following:
S. Fine e L. Ypi (a cura di), Migration in political theory: The ethics of movement and membership, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2016.
A. Sager, The Ethics and Politics of Immigration: Emerging Trends, Lanham, Rowman & littlefield, 2016.
J. Carens, The ethics of immigration, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2013.
D. Miller, Strangers in our midst: The political philosophy of immigration, Cambridge, Ma, Harvard University Press, 2016.
C. Kukathas, Immigration and freedom, Princeton, Princeton University Press, 2021.
S. Song, Immigration and Democracy, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2018.
Ricevimento: Thursdays 14-16 in Via Balbi 30, 7th floor (reservation recommended); if necessary, via Teams and by appointment upon request.
VALERIA OTTONELLI (President)
ALBERTO GIORDANO
CORRADO FUMAGALLI (Substitute)
FEDERICO ZUOLO (Substitute)
18 February 2025
Oral and written.
Final written essay, for those who have attended the course. Alternatively, the student can choose an oral exam on two of the texts listed in the bibliography of the course.
The exam, both it its oral and written form, aims at ascertaining the student's critical awareness of the normative and theoretical issues examined during the course and an adequate knowledge of the main positions within the academic debate on the course's topic. The written essay must not consist in a mere summary of the existing literature, but must develop and defend by proper arguments a specific claim relating to a theme discussed during the course (on the model of academic essays of the relevant field).