
Refugeehood and Rights: A Theoretical Debate
Author(s) -
Leonardo Barros da Silva Menezes
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
bib - revista brasileira de informação bibliográfica em ciências sociais
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2317-6644
pISSN - 1516-8085
DOI - 10.17666/bib9605/2021
Subject(s) - refugee , citizenship , displacement (psychology) , politics , sociology , law and economics , epistemology , refugee law , political science , law , philosophy , psychology , psychoanalysis
To which rights refugees are entitled? In this paper, I analyze the many challenges that two interrelated theoretical traditions of Refugee Studies have implicitly posed to one another. First, I examine the analytic philosophers’ assumption that we cannot understand the nature of a refugee claim until we know what entitles an individual to make it – i.e., what root cause for displacement could explain, and justify, such status. Second, after examining Critical Citizenship Studies, I mainly discuss a renewed Arendtian tradition whose cosmopolitan claim has advocated granting the right of citizenship to all forced displaced persons. By demonstrating why each response leaves room for strong rebuttals from the other side, I make clear the urgency of rethinking today’s international refugee regime as well as the place of political theory in it.