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A Rawlsian argument for extending family-based immigration benefits to same-sex couples

Version 2 2024-06-18, 02:31
Version 1 2007-01-01, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-18, 02:31 authored by MJ Lister
In this paper I argue that anyone who accepts a Rawlsian account of justice should favor granting family-based immigration benefit to same-sex couples. I first provide a brief over-view of the most relevant aspects of Rawls's position, Justice as Fairness. I then explain why family-based immigration benefits are an important topic and one that everyone interested in immigration and justice must consider. I then show how same-sex couples are currently systematically excluded from the benefits that flow from family-based immigration rights. Next I argue that people in the constitutional and legislative stages of Rawls's original position would act to protect family-based immigration rights for themselves and show how these rights are rights of the current citizens of a state to bring in certain outsiders and not rights of outsiders seeking to enter. Importantly, this argument takes place entirely within the bounds of Rawls's domestic theory of justice and does not make reference to his more controversial views found in his account of international justice. I then show that there is no acceptable reason to restrict these rights to opposite-sex couples and good reason to extend them to same-sex couples. Finally I consider two objections to my account and show why they do not threaten my conclusion.

History

Location

Memphis, Tenn.

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal article

Copyright notice

2007, Memphis State University

Journal

University of Memphis law review

Volume

37

Pagination

745-780

ISSN

1080-8582

Publisher

Cecil C. Humphreys School of Law, Memphis State University

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