Multiple Events

  • Wed, Nov 6, 2024
    Ethics at Noon
    Kiran Banerjee, Institutionalizing Refugee Agency and Participation in the Governance of the Global Refugee Regime

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    Institutionalizing Refugee Agency and Participation in the Governance of the Global Refugee Regime 

    This paper aims to advance a multi-scalar approach to reconceptualizing the place of forced migrants in the varying levels of governance that define the contemporary refugee regime. In doing so it responds to the emerging recognition of a growing imperative to rethink past articulations of international protection that have predominated for the last half-century. These earlier responses to displacement have largely treated refugees as objects of humanitarian intervention, giving little space for their voice or participation, thereby effacing the agency of displaced persons. Today’s current moment of reflection and political possibility therefore offers to address among the deepest normative failures of the contemporary refugee regime: if refugeehood is theorized in terms of the denial what Hannah Arendt called the “right to have rights” then the treatment of displaced persons within the international system constitutes more of a continuation, rather than remedy or reprieve, of this situation. Addressing the voice and agency of refugees is urgent and long overdue. However, formulating what meaningful representation and participation constitutes in these circumstances remains challenging. To address these considerations I proceed by taking up this issue from both normative and historical perspectives to map out and complicate the way representation and participation could be understood in this context. I do so by reconstructing several distinctive models of representation to underscore the different normative considerations underlying these approaches. I conclude by showing how this should be applied to the refugee regime in order to both reform and transform contemporary international protection.

    ► This event is hybrid. Join in person at the Centre for Ethics (Larkin Building room 200) or online here.

     

    Kiran Banerjee

    Political Science
    Dalhousie University

    12:00 PM - 02:00 PM
    Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
    200 Larkin

  • Fri, Nov 8, 2024

    David Owen, On Vindication in Politics: A Problem in Political Ethics

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    On Vindication in Politics: A Problem in Political Ethics

    This paper takes up the largely neglected concept of vindication in relation to politics in order to demonstrate the ways in which vindication matters with respect to the exercise of political agency and to sustaining the practice of politics. More specifically, I try to show how reflection on the concept of vindication and its relationship with the concept of justification is important for identifying and addressing dimensions of political ethics that are central both to sustaining the valuing of politics as a way of conducting our lives together and to offering an understanding of the kind of ethical character that we should desire from politicians.

    ► This event is hybrid. Join in person at the Centre for Ethics (Larkin Building room 200) or online here.

     

    David Owen

    School of Economic, Social and Political Sciences
    Faculty of Social Sciences
    University of Southampton

    04:00 PM - 06:00 PM
    Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
    200 Larkin