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Making Migration Law: The Foreigner, Sovereignty, and the Case of Australia


ISBN13: 9781316625767
Published: August 2019
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback (Hardback in 2018)
Price: £19.99
Hardback edition , ISBN13 9781107173279



Despatched in 6 to 8 days.

The emergence of international human rights law and the end of the White Australia immigration policy were events of great historical moment. Yet, they were not harbingers of a new dawn in migration law.

This book argues that this is because migration law in Australia is best understood as part of a longer jurisprudential tradition in which certain political-economic interests have shaped the relationship between the foreigner and the sovereign.

Eve Lester explores how this relationship has been wrought by a political-economic desire to regulate race and labour; a desire that has produced the claim that there exists an absolute sovereign right to exclude or condition the entry and stay of foreigners.

Lester calls this putative right a discourse of 'absolute sovereignty'. She argues that 'absolute sovereignty' talk continues to be a driver of migration lawmaking, shaping the foreigner-sovereign relation and making thinkable some of the world's harshest asylum policies.

Subjects:
Other Jurisdictions , Australia
Contents:
1. Introduction

Part I.
2. Early International Law And The Foreigner
3. A Common Law Doctrine of Sovereignty
4. A Constitutionalisation of Sovereignty

Part II.
Introduction
5. Mandatory Detention
6. Planned Destitution
7. Conclusion

Epilogue
Index.