312 Pages
    by Routledge

    312 Pages
    by Routledge

    The articles which comprise this book were written for a conference organized at Mont Saint Michel, France in September, 1989 by The Ethikon Institute in collaboration with The California Institute of Technology. The closing years of the twentieth century seem likely to be dominated by issues involving borders. There are strong forces making for the breaking up of states, as we have seen in the Balkans, the former Soviet Union and many other parts of the world. At the same time, there are also strong forces making for the transcending of state boundaries as finance and production become increasingly international. The moves towards integration within the European Economic Community are one institutional response to a phenomenon experienced by almost every country. This book focuses on the crossing of state boundaries by people and by money.

    Introduction 1 A reader's guide 2 If people were money Liberal Egalitarian Perspectives. 3 Migration and morality: A liberal egalitarian perspective 4 Ethics and international economic relations 5 Commentary: Liberalism and migration. Libertarian Perspectives 6 Libertarianism and the transnational migration of people 7 The migration of money - from a libertarian viewpoint 8 Commentary: Magic associations and imperfect people. Marxist Perspectives 9 Marxism and the transnational migration of people: Ethical issues 10 Transnational migration of money and capital — a Marxist perspective 11 Commentary: Citizenship exploitation, unequal exchange and the breakdown of popular sovereignty. Natural Law Perspectives 12 The transnational migration of people seen from within a natural law tradition 13 Natural law, solidarity and international justice 14 Commentary on Dummett and Weithman Political Realist Perspectives 15 Migration in law and ethics: A realist perspective 16 Ethics and the movement of money: Realist approaches 17 Commentary: The political realism of free movement. Concluding Perspectives 18 Alternative ethical perspectives on transnational migration 19 The quest for consistency: A sceptical view

    Biography

    Brian Barry is Professor of Political Science at the London School of Economics, and sometime editor of both Ethics and the British Journal o f Political Science. He is a Fellow of the British Academy and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Robert E. Goodin is now Professor of Philosophy in the Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian National University, having spent the previous decade teaching government at the University of Essex. He is author of, most recently, Motivating Political Morality (1992) and is founding editor of the new Journal o f Political Philosophy, commencing publication from Blackwell in 1993.