There are few issues more contentious today than the nature and purpose of borders. Migration flows and the refugee crisis have propelled the issue of borders into the centre of political debate and revealed our moral unease more clearly than ever. Who are we to deny others access to our territory? Is not freedom of movement a basic human right, one that should be defended above all others?
In this book Paul Scheffer takes a different view. Rather than thinking of borders as obstacles to freedom, he argues that borders make freedom possible. Democracy and redistributive justice are only possible with the regulation of access to territories and rights. When liberals ignore an open society’s need for borders, people with authoritarian inclinations will begin to erect them. In the context of Europe, the project of removing internal borders can therefore only be successful if Europe accepts responsibility for its external border.
This timely and important book challenges conventional ways of thinking and will be of interest to everyone concerned with the great social and political issues of our time.
Table of Contents
Table of contents:Acknowledgements
Introduction: Exploring boundaries
I. The value of proximity
Discovery of the world citizen
Tartars in the suburbs
The revenge of geography
The digital shadow
II. An age of migration
The citizenship bonus
The exodus and our conscience
The critical limits reconsidered
The return of the caliphate
III. The state of Europe
After the Pax Americana
A hidden vitality
Scenarios for the Union
A compulsion to grand politics
Notes
Bibliography
Index