Content area

Abstract

This paper draws upon Hannah Arendt's idea of the 'right to have rights' to critique the current protection gap faced by refugees today. While refugees are protected from refoulement once they make it to the jurisdiction or territory of a state, they face an ever-increasing array of non-entrée policies designed to stymie access to state territory. Without being able to enter a state capable of securing their claims to safety and dignity, refugees cannot achieve the rights which ought to be afforded to them under international law. Drawing upon both legal theory and political philosophy, this paper argues that refugees today, just as the stateless in Arendt’s time, must be afforded the ‘right to have rights’, understood as a right to enter state territory.

Details

Title
The Right to Have Rights as a Right to Enter: Addressing a Lacuna in the International Refugee Protection Regime
Author
Asher Lazarus Hirsch 1 ; Bell, Nathan 2 

 Monash University Faculty of Law, Clayton, Victoria, Australia 
 Monash University School of Social Sciences, Clayton, Victoria, Australia 
Pages
417-437
Publication year
2017
Publication date
Dec 2017
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
1524-8879
e-ISSN
1874-6306
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1968151908
Copyright
Human Rights Review is a copyright of Springer, (2017). All Rights Reserved.