1. |
- Agnafors, Marcus
(author)
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Quality of Government and the Treatment of Immigrants
- 2013
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In: Ecumenical Review Sibiu / Revista Ecumenica Sibiu. - 2065-5940. ; 5:1, s. 25-41
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Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
- Normative questions concerning the treatment of immigrants can be approached from various perspectives: consequentialistic, deontological, fairness-based, rectificatory, or similar. In this paper, the implications of the idea of quality of government for the treatment of immigrants are examined. It is argued that an acceptable definition of quality of governance includes a principle of beneficence, which prescribes a beneficial treatment of immigrants whenever laws and policies allow. The principle, which is not novel in itself, is presented in a more specified form and is provided with a philosophical justification.
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2. |
- Collste, Göran, 1950-
(author)
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Ethics and Migration. An Introduction
- 2012
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In: Ecumenical Review Sibiu / Revista Ecumenica Sibiu. - Sibiu : Honterus. - 2065-5940. ; iv:3, s. 407-411
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Journal article (other academic/artistic)
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3. |
- Collste, Göran, 1950-
(author)
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Is a generous Immigration Policy a Way to Rectify for Colonial Injustices?
- 2013
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In: Review of Ecumenical Studies. - Sibiu : Honterus. - 2065-5940. ; 5:1, s. 69-77
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Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
- Migration from former colonies to former colonial powers represents a large part of the 20th century migration. The question discussed in this article is if a generous immigration policy on behalf of persons from former colonies is an appropriate means for the European nations and former colonial powers to compensate for colonial injustices.
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4. |
- Friberg von Sydow, Rikard, 1978-
(author)
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The Outsourcing of Survival : Ethical problems regarding the privatization of migration and integration processes in the European Union
- 2013
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In: Revista Ecumenică Sibiu. - Sibiu : The Institute for Ecumenical Research, Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu. - 2065-5940 .- 2359-8107. ; 5:1, s. 79-90
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Journal article (other academic/artistic)abstract
- In many countries in Europe entrepreneurs take over the responsibility of the integration process. This paper criticizes a certain type of entrepreneurial role model as promoting a single input agent, only counting profit as its input. The possibility of a non-outsourced, conscience-based model for regulating the integration process is discussed as a possibility and as a stepping stone for critique of the entrepreneurial model’s social claims as a whole.
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