18-05-2013
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Recent issue  20/1 (2013)
Introduction: Critical Perspectives on Global Politics and Globalization
(Annelies Decat)
In The Beginning There Was and Will Have Been the World or Who's Afraid of the Nation-State?
(Andréa B. Gill)
Cosmopolitan Ethics from Below
(Gilbert Leung)
Care Drain as an Issue of Global Gender Justice
(Anca Gheaus)
What If We Took Autonomous Recovery Seriously? A Democratic Critique of Contemporary Western Ethical Foreign Policy
(Olivia Umurerwa Rutazibwa)
Obamacare and Conscientious Objection. Some Introductory Thoughts
(Nir Eyal)
Religious Liberty, Conscience, and the Affordable Care Act
(Holly Fernandez Lunch)
Conscience and Health
(Elizabeth Fenton)
Taxation, Conscientious Objection and Religious Freedom
(Annabelle Lever)
Can Moral Integrity Warrant Opposition to Tax-Funded Healthcare?
(Noam Zohar)
Conscientious Objection, Coercion, the Affordable Care Act, and US States
(Glenn Cohen)
The Use and Abuse of Religious Freedom
(Peter Singer)
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Ethical Perspectives
Issue : 12/2 (June - 2005)
The Racialisation of Mainstream Politics in Europe
Steve Garner
   Page : 123 - 140
  Although particular political parties have succeeded in some countries, the Far Right has relatively little electoral support in most EU member-states. Yet what we can observe is a consensus over far-right ideas; fundamentally racialised concepts of the nation, tighter immigration controls, and less generous asylum regimes, which form part of the centre-right/centre-left contemporary mainstream.

Focusing on the Far Right alone is to distort the question: a better formulated problem would be that of how the racialisation of Europe both prior to, and as a corollary of the construction of the European Union, functions to set parameters to national political action.

The messages conveyed by ‘tough’ immigration policies produced by mainstream parties for example, bolster the Far Right in its endeavour to racialise membership of the nation.

The Far Right’s ideological ascendancy is thus a product of mainstream political ethics spiralling rightwards and historically backwards, rather than simply of pressure from the Far Right itself.
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