Available Formats
War Refugees: Risk, Justice, and Moral Responsibility
By (Author) Jennifer Kling
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
4th April 2019
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Social and political philosophy
War crimes
Genocide and ethnic cleansing
Central / national / federal government policies
Migration, immigration and emigration
305.906914
Hardback
132
Width 160mm, Height 232mm, Spine 16mm
386g
The current refugee crisis is unparalleled in history in its size and severity. According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), there are roughly 67 million refugees worldwide, the vast majority of whom are refugees as the result of wars and other military actions. This social and political crisis1 in every 122 humans is a refugeecries out for normative explanation and analysis. Morally and politically, how should we understand this crisis How should we respond to it, and why Jennifer Kling argues that war refugees have suffered, and continue to suffer, a series of harms, wrongs, and oppressions, and so are owed recompense, restitution, and aidas a matter of justiceby socio-political institutions around the world. She makes the case that war refugees should be viewed and treated differently than migrants, due to their particular circumstances, but that their circumstances do not wholly alleviate their own moral responsibilities. We must stop treating refugees as objects to be moved around on the global stage, Kling contends, and instead see them as people, with their own subjective experiences of the world, who might surprise us with their words and works.
Jennifer Kling is assistant professor of philosophy at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs.