4th Global Justice Network Event
Global Justice and Migration:
Normative Perspectives and Empirical Trends
EUI, 23-24 April 2010

On 23-24 April, the 4th Global Justice Network Workshop was held at the European University Institute, in Florence.

After two workshops in Oxford and one in Sydney (see previous events), GJN members and other scholars discussed the relationship between global justice and migration wshilst enjoying the landscape of beautiful Tuscan hills.

The workshop was jointly organized by IMISCOE (International Migration and Social Cohesion in Europe), the European University Institute, and the Global Justice Network.

Convenors
Rainer Bauböck
Miriam Ronzoni
Christian Schemmel

Full Programme
Download the full workshop programme.

Speakers

Friday 23 April
Eszter Kollar (John Cabot University: Locating (In)justice in Transnational Health-Worker Migration: International Human Rights vs. Global Distributive Justice

Cristina Brădăţan (Texas Tech University): Emigration, Poverty, and Development: Morocco and Romania in a Comparative Perspective

Roxana Barbulescu (EUI): Age Discrimination, Aged Migrants, and Entry Policies in European Countries

Jonathan Zaragoza (Universidad Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona): Externalization of Migration Policies and Global Justice

Sarah Fine (University of Cambridge): Immigration Control and the Modern State

Costica Dumbrava (EUI): Democratic Polity and Selective Admission

Bas Schotel (University of Amsterdam): Practical Arguments from Normative Migration Theory: Shifting the Burden of Proof from Migrant to Migration Authorities

Saturday 24 April

Tiziana Torresi (University of Oxford) and Valeria Ottonelli (Università di Genova): Migration, Voluntariness, and Justice

Patti Lenard (University of Ottawa): If I Object to Increasing Rates of Permanent Migration, Should I Object to Temporary Labour Migration, too?

Martin Ruhs (University of Oxford): The Economics and Politics of Migrant Rights

Previous Posts

The Global Justice Network is a forum promoting exchange and accessible research in the broad field of global justice.