Refugee aid is not supererogatory: A cosmopolitan Rawlsian framework for thinking about human rights, health and our obligations to refugees

Authors

  • Evan Hurley O’Dwyer

Keywords:

Medicine

Abstract

N/A

References

Carens, J. (1987). Aliens and Citizens: The Case for Open Borders. The Review of Politics, 49 (2), 251-273.
Daniels, N. (1985). Just Health Care. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Marmot, M. (2005). Social determinants of health inequalities. The Lancet Public Health, 365 (9464), 1099-1104.
Pogge, T. (1994). An Egalitarian Law of Peoples. Philosophy and Public Affairs, 23 (3), 195-224.
Pogge, T. (2001). Rawls on International Justice. The Philosophical Quarterly, 51 (203), 246-253.
Pogge, T. (2004). The Incoherence Between Rawls’s Theories of Justice. Fordham Law Review, 72 (5), 1739-1759.
Rawls, J. (1971). A Theory of Justice. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Rawls, J. (1993). The Law of Peoples. Critical Inquiry, 20 (1), 36-38.
Sandel, M. (2009). Justice: What’s the Right Thing to Do? New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
Singer, P. S. (1988). The Ethics of Refugee Policy. In Open Borders? Closed Societies? New York: Greenwood Press.
UNHCR. (2016, June). EUROPE: Syrian Asylum Applications.
Walzer, M. (1983). Spheres of Justice: A Defense of Pluralism and Equality. Oxford: Robertson.
Zalta, E. N. (Ed.). (2016). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Stanford, CA: The Metaphysics Research Lab, Center for the Study of Language and Information, Stanford University.

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Published

2017-01-01

How to Cite

Hurley O’Dwyer, E. . (2017). Refugee aid is not supererogatory: A cosmopolitan Rawlsian framework for thinking about human rights, health and our obligations to refugees. Trinity Student Medical Journal , 18(1), 42–48. Retrieved from https://ojs.tchpc.tcd.ie/index.php/tsmj/article/view/1763

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