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European Journal of Political Theory, Vol. 6, No. 4, 445-462 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1474885107080650

Democratic Exclusions and Democratic Iterations

Dilemmas of `Just Membership' and Prospects of Cosmopolitan Federalism

Seyla Benhabib

Yale University, seyla.benhabib{at}yale.edu

In my book, The Rights of Others, I developed a discourse-theoretic approach to questions of political membership in liberal democracies, which include practices of citizenship, as well as of immigration, refuge and asylum. This article revisits five issues in response to various criticisms. How can we justify democratic exclusions? Is there a `right to membership' and how can it be reconciled with the different practices of various constitutional democracies? Is there a distinction between normatively acceptable and normatively problematic restrictions on political membership? Does the concept of `democratic iterations' describe normative or empirical processes? How plausible is the binarism of the national and the global? I argue that democratic exclusions can be justified by not discriminating against would-be citizens and immigrants on the basis of ascriptive criteria. Ascriptive characteristics, like one's sex and skin colour, are not the product of one's voluntary doings. Democratic iterations are empirical processes which can be judged in the light of normative criteria deriving from discourse theory. Furthermore, while the binarism of national and global is problematical, alternative configurations of political membership at the present are not more defensible.

Key Words: citizenship • democratic exclusions • democratic iterations • immigration • migrations and the world economy • the national and the global • post-national citizenship • refuge and asylum • right to membership


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