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Symposium on David Miller’s Strangers in Our Midst: The Political Philosophy of Immigration

Idealism, realism, and immigration: David Miller’s Strangers in Our Midst

 

Abstract

David Miller’s Strangers in Our Midst is an important contribution to the debate among political philosophers about how liberal democratic states should deal with the issue of migration. But it is also a thoughtful statement concerning how best to do political philosophy and, as such, contributes also to the growing debate within Anglo-American political theory about the relative merits of ‘ideal’ versus ‘non-ideal’ normative theorising. Miller’s argument in the book builds on his earlier published work in suggesting that political philosophy should be ‘for Earthlings’: it should not be understood as a process of ideal theorising which ignores political reality. He argues that normative theorists should seek to resolve complex political problems by taking seriously the political context that makes these problems complex, rather than putting aside that context in the interests of deriving first principles. This is a controversial approach, which requires political philosophers to take more seriously than they often do the expressed concerns of citizens living in democratic states and the practical problems associated with applying normative principles in ways which actually help address the issue at hand. This piece discusses some of these themes, and the issue of migration more generally, in order to help frame the debate which follows.

Acknowledgements

The essays in this special section of CRISPP began life as papers presented at two separate events devoted to discussing David Miller’s latest contribution to the debate about immigration and political theory. The first was a roundtable session at the 2016 Britain and Ireland Association for Political Thought conference held at St Catherine’s College, Oxford, 8 January 2016. The session was Chaired by myself, and comprised shorter versions of the papers included in this volume by David Miller, Sarah Fine, Chandran Kukathas and David Owen. The second event was a workshop held at the Institute for Philosophy, Hamburg University, 18 March 2016, organised by Thomas Schramme and Christine Straehl, comprising papers by David Miller, David Owen, Oliviero Angeli, Eszter Kollar and Christine Straehl. I should like to thank all these contributors, and those who provided anonymous peer review, for their assistance in organising this CRISPP special section. I should also like to thank Richard Bellamy for the initial invitation.

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