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foreignness

Much of what is published on this site relates directly to the question of foreigness: or thinking of people as being “foreigners”. Because of its pervasiveness it is important to challenge the assumption that it is OK to treat non-citizens differently – that they are somehow less entitled to human rights. Many articles explore how we unconsciously think in this way.

At home with foreignness

By
February 8, 2011
url

We all come from somewhere. It’s an unavoidable fact of life. It’s similarly unavoidable that we have some sort of emotional connection to that part of the planet we call home. For some, it’s a deep sentimental attachment. For others, it’s a set of memories that they’d prefer to keep in the past. Regardless,...
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Love Your Mother

By
January 8, 2011
love your mother 512512

Pictures of planet Earth “our home planet” capture our imagination.  This one commemorates Earth Day and its message is simple: we need to love the planet we live on. It’s easy to take our ability to see the whole Earth for granted and to forget that until the ‘Space Age’ at the end of the 1960′s...
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When Foreignness is Accentuated

By
December 30, 2010
Image from Wikimedia Commons

One of the challenging aspects of abolishing foreignness is the sheer scope of the concept of “foreignness.” Foreignness can be all-pervading. It can manifest itself in our thoughts and our laws, in our attitudes and our interactions, in our beliefs and our behaviours. Articles on Abolish Foreignness explore a range of approaches to abolishing...
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Government should take lesson from Christmas Islanders

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December 21, 2010
Christmas Island

It appears from all reporting that what makes the tragedy that occurred on the morning of Wednesday 15 December, 2010 on the shoreline of Christmas Island all the more tragic is that human beings had to watch (and listen) helplessly whilst fellow humans died just metres away. The stories of the traumatised witnesses have painted a horrific picture of...
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Book Review: The Strange Alchemy of Law and Life by Justice Albie Sachs

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November 10, 2010
Book Review: The Strange Alchemy of Law and Life by Justice Albie Sachs

The victims and perpetrators of human rights abuses whisper from the pages of this short book.  They speak to us of their struggle to realize their own humanity and recognize the humanity of each other.   For a judge it is an unusual book, but then Albie Sachs is an unusual judge.  A member of the...
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The Crisis of Human Rights: Discrimination Against Non-Citizens

By
October 2, 2010
The Crisis of Human Rights:  Discrimination Against Non-Citizens

The basic idea at the heart of human rights is that all human beings are equal:  equal in rights – equal in human dignity.   This idea is universally accepted and believed.  At the same time another idea – the idea that we are separately citizens of different countries is also a feature of the modern...
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A lesson from Europe

By
September 19, 2010

The question of the place of the Roma in European society has returned to the media spotlight. The New York Times reports that a meeting of European leaders this week “degenerated into open discord” over France’s plans to deport Roma. Since Romania and Bulgaria entered the European Union in 2007, Roma have migrated in...
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Abolish Foreignness

By
January 8, 2010
bluemarble

Eight million children under the age of five die each year from largely preventable causes.  One billion people live in abject poverty. Thousands die crossing international borders while fleeing poverty, war or persecution.  Rich countries reinforce barriers, laws and measures to prevent people crossing their borders.  Hundreds of thousands are held in migration prisons  as if they were criminals. 67 million people live...
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