Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
  • Cited by 2
      • Edited by Seyla Benhabib, Yale University and Columbia Law School, Ayelet Shachar, University of Toronto and University of California, Berkeley
      Show more authors
    • Open Access
      You have access to this book
    • Select format
    • Publisher:
      Cambridge University Press
      Publication date:
      January 2025
      January 2025
      ISBN:
      9781009512824
      9781009512817
      9781009512848
      Creative Commons:
      Creative Common License - CC Creative Common License - BY Creative Common License - NC
      This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC 4.0.
      https://creativecommons.org/creativelicenses
      Dimensions:
      (235 x 159 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.68kg, 374 Pages
      Dimensions:
      (229 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.55kg, 374 Pages
    Open Access
    You have access to this book
    Selected: Digital
    View content
    Add to cart View cart Buy from Cambridge.org

    Book description

    Responding to ever-increasing pressures of migration, states, supranational, and subnational actors deploy complex moves and maneuvers to reconfigure borders, rights, and territory, giving rise to a changing legal cartography of international relations and international law. The purpose of this volume is to study this new reconfiguration of rights, territoriality, and jurisdiction at the empirical and normative levels and to examine its implications for the future of democratic governance within and across borders. Written by a diverse and accomplished group of scholars, the chapters in this volume employ legal, historical, philosophical, critical, discursive, and postcolonial perspectives to explore how the territoriality of the modern states – ostensibly, the most stable and unquestionable element undergirding the current international system – has been rewritten and dramatically reimagined. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

    Reviews

    ‘Borders have long been regarded as delimiting national territories and defining state sovereignties. But as Lawless Zones, Rightless Subjects convincingly demonstrates, a new geography of externalized and hardening borders has recently emerged as a result of moral panics around migration fueled by xenophobic discourses. Traveling across disciplines and continents, the authors brilliantly illuminate this historical transformation of global political landscapes.’

    Didier Fassin - Professor at the Collège de France and the Institute for Advanced Study

    ‘Disclosing, charting, and critically engaging the reconfigurations of territory, rights, and jurisdiction that structure the global politics of migration and asylum, this volume explores their implications for contemporary political orders. Benhabib and Shachar have assembled a stellar cast of investigators who map this terrain from diverse perspectives in order to shed light over the whole. Essential reading for legal and political theorists concerned with understanding the present, and sustaining the futures, of democratic governance and of human rights.’

    David Owen - Professor of Social and Political Philosophy, University of Southampton

    ‘This remarkable volume, examining the many modes of closing doors to the movement of people, opens wide windows for readers to understand these anxious times, as migrants bear the weight of the sense of dislocation that is experienced within and beyond the nation state.’

    Judith Resnik - Arthur Liman Professor of Law, Yale Law School

    Refine List

    Actions for selected content:

    Select all | Deselect all
    • View selected items
    • Export citations
    • Download PDF (zip)
    • Save to Kindle
    • Save to Dropbox
    • Save to Google Drive

    Save Search

    You can save your searches here and later view and run them again in "My saved searches".

    Please provide a title, maximum of 40 characters.
    ×

    Contents

    Full book PDF
    • Lawless Zones, Rightless Subjects
      pp i-ii
    • Lawless Zones, Rightless Subjects - Title page
      pp iii-iii
    • Migration, Asylum, and Shifting Borders
    • Copyright page
      pp iv-iv
    • Contents
      pp v-vi
    • Contributors
      pp vii-viii
    • Acknowledgments
      pp ix-x
    • Part I - Territoriality and Rights Protection
      pp 27-106
    • 1 - Moving Borders, Refugee Protection, and Immigration Policy
      pp 29-42
    • 2 - Cease-Fires
      pp 43-58
    • Temporality, Bordering, and Climate Mobilities
    • 4 - The Role of Proximity for States’ Obligations toward Persons Seeking Protection
      pp 75-89
    • Part II - New Geographies of Borders: Territory, Land, and Water
      pp 107-172
    • 7 - The Materiality of Territory
      pp 124-140
    • 8 - Territoriality from the Sea
      pp 141-157
    • Political Action in a World of Vanishing Exteriority
    • 9 - “Forced Migrants,” Human Rights, and “Climate Refugees”
      pp 158-172
    • Part III - Public Territories and Private Borders: Tracing Transnational Power Relations
      pp 173-244
    • 10 - From the Colony to the Border
      pp 175-191
    • The Lawful Lawlessness of Racial Violence
    • 11 - Private Borders, Hidden Territories
      pp 192-207
    • 13 - UNHCR and Biometrics
      pp 228-244
    • Refugees’ Rights in a Legal No-Man’s Land?
    • Part IV - Democratizing Shifting Borders
      pp 245-296
    • 15 - Shifting Borders, Shifting Political Representation
      pp 264-279
    • Bibliography
      pp 297-346
    • Index
      pp 347-362

    Metrics

    Altmetric attention score

    Full text views

    Total number of HTML views: 0
    Total number of PDF views: 0 *
    Loading metrics...

    Book summary page views

    Total views: 0 *
    Loading metrics...

    * Views captured on Cambridge Core between #date#. This data will be updated every 24 hours.

    Usage data cannot currently be displayed.

    Accessibility standard: Unknown

    Accessibility compliance for the PDF of this book is currently unknown and may be updated in the future.