自由流动、主权和世界性国家责任

Luis Cabrera
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引用次数: 1

摘要

一个主权国家能有多“世界主义”?这个问题是在未经批准的移民和人员跨州自由流动的论点的背景下审议的。首先详细介绍了接受国领导人在回应未经授权的移民时通常表达的非世界性态度。他们关注的不是平等的道德地位和公平考虑所有人利益的世界性使命,而是未经授权入境的犯罪行为,通常是被认为是犯罪行为或入境者本身的不良品格,以及对人口走私者的“战争”。有人认为,一个强大的世界主义国家将支持更自由的人员流动。然而,这提出了一个问题:一个不寻求控制其边界的国家仍然是一个世界主义国家吗?根据约瑟夫·卡伦斯(Joseph Carens)的论点,人们承认,原则上,国家主权可以与国家对边界的控制分开定义。然而,在实践中,自由流动近年来与相当密集的区域一体化项目密切相关。这需要大量汇集主权,实际上创造了更国际化的地区,而不是更国际化的主权国家。总体而言,该分析强调了在一个由独立主权国家组成的体系中实现强大的世界主义道德目标所面临的一些重大挑战,这些挑战是由制度世界主义者强调的。然而,它也强调了在当前制度下,各国在移民问题上可以“更加国际化”的方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Free Movement, Sovereignty and Cosmopolitan State Responsibility
How ‘cosmopolitan’ can a sovereign state be? That question is considered here in the context of unauthorized immigration and arguments for free movement of persons across state boundaries. Details are first presented on non-cosmopolitan attitudes commonly expressed by receiving-state leaders in response to unauthorized immigration. They focus not on equal moral standing and the cosmopolitan mandate to give fair consideration to all persons’ interests, but on the criminality of unauthorized entry, often the perceived criminality or poor character of entrants themselves, and a ‘war’ on human smugglers. A robustly cosmopolitan state, it is argued, would support much freer movement of persons. This raises a question, however: is a state which does not seek to control its borders still a cosmopolitan state? It is acknowledged, in relation to an argument from Joseph Carens, that state sovereignty might, in principle, be defined separate from state control of borders. In practice, however, free movement has been strongly associated in recent years with fairly intensive projects of regional integration. These entail significant pooling of sovereignty, creating in effect more-cosmopolitan regions, rather than more-cosmopolitan sovereign states. Overall, the analysis reinforces some significant challenges, highlighted by institutional cosmopolitans, to realizing robust cosmopolitan moral aims in a system of independent sovereign states. It also, however, highlights ways in which states can be ‘more-cosmopolitan’ in relation to migration in the current system.
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