Part 1: Migration and Globalization
1: Double Threat? Unauthorized Migration as a Global Phenomenon -
Marie T. Friedmann Marquardt
2: The Moral Economy of Labor Mobility: Migration and the Global
Workforce - Gemma Tulud Cruz
3: Root Causes of Forced Migration in Africa - Ogenga Otunnu
4: Migration in a Post-Colonial World - Marianne
Heimbach-Steins
5: International Law and Forced Migration: The UN and NGOs’ Global
Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking and Protect Refugees and
Labor Immigrant Rights - Marco Tavanti
Part 2: religious and Ethical Perspectives on Justice for
Migrants
6: Loving the Stranger and the Moral Myopia at Agriprocessors -
Moses Pava
7: And They Fled into Egypt: Migration in Light of Scripture and
Catholic Social Teaching - Elizabeth Collier
8: Islam and Immigration - Azam Nizamuddin
9: The Migrant, My Mother: Buddhist Ethical Perspectives on
Migration - Charles R. Strain
10: Ethical Reflections on Childhood Migration - Frida Kerner
Furman
Part 3: Migration: Ethical Issues in the U.S. Context
11: Arguing About Immigration: The Claims of Restrictionists and
Non-Restrictionists
- Elizabeth Collier
12: From the Sanctuary Movement to No More Deaths: The Challenge to
Communities of Faith - Reverend John Fife
13: No More Deaths: Border Enforcement and Moral Devolution -
Charles R. Strain
14: On the Just Treatment of Immigrant Workers - Kim Bobo
15: Immigrants and Refugees Held in Detention - Sioban Albiol
16: Immigration Reform: What Can Religious Voices Require of the
State? - Reverend Craig Mousin
Elizabeth W. Collier is associate professor of business ethics
in the Brennan School of Business at Dominican University where she
also co-directs the Center for Global Peace through Commerce.
Charles R. Strain is professor of religious studies at DePaul
University.
This volume focuses on contemporary issues surrounding global
migration, both in the wider world and, more specifically, in the
US. Editors Collier and Strain have assembled 16 essays on the
subject from contributors, most of whom are academics; others are
practitioners and activists in the field. The contributions include
views from representatives of major world religions (Judaism,
Islam, and Buddhism), but the dominant viewpoint is that of liberal
Roman Catholic social teachings. The volume is organized into three
sections. The first focuses on questions concerning contemporary
migration of peoples around the world and ways the forces of
globalization have affected this. The second examines various
religious and ethical perspectives on the treatment of migrants and
on calls for justice for them. The third section concentrates on
ethical and political analysis of current immigration policies in
the US. . . .Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students and
researchers/faculty.
*Choice Reviews*
There are many books now available on the ethics and politics of
migration, but this one stands out. It includes not only Christian
perspectives, but also views from the world's other great religious
traditions. It also places the U.S. discussion on migration in the
larger global context of migration, showing the topic as one of the
most remarkable features of our time. Religious and Ethical
Perspectives on Global Migration is an indispensable addition to
the literature on migration today.
*Robert J. Schreiter, CPPS, Vatican Council II Professor of
Theology, Catholic Theological Union at Chicago*
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