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Ethics and exclusion: representations of sovereignty in Australia's approach to asylum-seekers
2006
Review of International Studies
From 2001, the Australian government has justified a hard-line approach to asylum-seekers on the basis of the need to preserve its sovereignty. This article critically evaluates this justification, arguing that the conception of sovereignty as the 'right to exclude' involves a denial of responsibility to the most vulnerable in global politics. We particularly focus here on the ways in which the Australian government has attempted to create support for this conception of sovereignty and ethical
doi:10.1017/s0260210506007029
fatcat:bdpgqyyh5zewpkomy5ycgf2t54