AbstractIn the literature on refugeehood in political theory, there has been a recent turn towards what have been called “state system legitimacy” views. These views derive an account of states’ obligations to refugees from a broader picture of the conditions for international legitimacy. This paper seeks to develop the state system legitimacy view of refugeehood by subjecting the most developed version of it—the account developed by David Owen—to critical scrutiny. We diagnose an ambiguity in Owen’s theory of refugeehood, in the concept of political membership, and unpack the implications of this ambiguity for state system legitimacy views. First, we reconstruct the key aspects of Owen’s account of refugeehood and show how it represents an...
In this article, we examine how the concept of a `refugee' is discursively constituted within the UK...
The 1951 Geneva Convention relating to the Status of the Refugees and its related 1967 Protocol desi...
Refugee protection has long been an issue of great moral and legal importance among the countries in...
This thesis argues for a new normative understanding of refugeehood built around the concept of memb...
This chapter argues that the international refugee regime is best conceptualized as a legitimacy-rep...
This definition is meant to intervene in the globalized conversation on the nature of the nation sta...
Having left their home country, 18 million refugees and other protection seekers cannot exert their ...
Debates concerning who is entitled to refugee status and what is owed to persons with that status ha...
This chapter offers a practice-based normative reconstruction of the international refugee regime th...
In this paper I focus on Gillian Brock’s treatment of the case of refugees. After noting a potential...
Political asylum is thought to be a distinctively liberal practice, its scope and limits uniquely ju...
This dissertation investigates regime-based efforts by states to cooperate in providing assistance a...
The different responses of Canada and Australia to the arrival of asylum seekers present an interest...
This thesis focuses on the manner in which the EU, the UK, and Canada respond to and engage with the...
The thesis examines the international refugee protection system in order to discover whether or not ...
In this article, we examine how the concept of a `refugee' is discursively constituted within the UK...
The 1951 Geneva Convention relating to the Status of the Refugees and its related 1967 Protocol desi...
Refugee protection has long been an issue of great moral and legal importance among the countries in...
This thesis argues for a new normative understanding of refugeehood built around the concept of memb...
This chapter argues that the international refugee regime is best conceptualized as a legitimacy-rep...
This definition is meant to intervene in the globalized conversation on the nature of the nation sta...
Having left their home country, 18 million refugees and other protection seekers cannot exert their ...
Debates concerning who is entitled to refugee status and what is owed to persons with that status ha...
This chapter offers a practice-based normative reconstruction of the international refugee regime th...
In this paper I focus on Gillian Brock’s treatment of the case of refugees. After noting a potential...
Political asylum is thought to be a distinctively liberal practice, its scope and limits uniquely ju...
This dissertation investigates regime-based efforts by states to cooperate in providing assistance a...
The different responses of Canada and Australia to the arrival of asylum seekers present an interest...
This thesis focuses on the manner in which the EU, the UK, and Canada respond to and engage with the...
The thesis examines the international refugee protection system in order to discover whether or not ...
In this article, we examine how the concept of a `refugee' is discursively constituted within the UK...
The 1951 Geneva Convention relating to the Status of the Refugees and its related 1967 Protocol desi...
Refugee protection has long been an issue of great moral and legal importance among the countries in...