Rethinking Rightlessness: The Right to Have Rights and the EU-Turkey Statement
Berfin Nur OSSO
İÇİNDEKİLER
CHAPTER I
Introduction
1.1. Background
1.2. Research Objective and Research Questions
1.3. Scope of the Study
1.4. Methods and Data
1.5. Outline
CHAPTER II
On the Arendtian Critique of Human Rights
2.1. Human Rights in Political and Legal Theory
2.2. Why a "Right to Have Rights"?
2.3. The "Right to Have Rights" qua the Right to Membership in a Political Community
2.4. The "Right to Have Rights" qua the Right to Asylum
2.5. Interim Conclusion
CHAPTER III
The Law of Human Rights: Certain Safeguards in International and European Law
3.1. The Rights to Life and to Liberty in International and European Law
3.2. The Prohibition of Torture in European Law
3.3. The Prohibition of Refoulement in International and European Law
3.4. The Secondary Rights under the Refugee Convention
CHAPTER IV
Deciding "In", Acting "Out": The Externalization of Migration Management in the EU and the Turkish Asylum Regime
4.1. On the Externalization of Migration Management
4.2. The Externalization of Migration Management in the EU
4.3. The Externalization of Migration Management and the Turkish Asylum Regime
4.4. Interim Conclusion
CHAPTER V
The "Right to Have Rights" and the EU-Turkey Statement: The Two Unimaginable?
5.1. The EU-Turkey Statement from a Legal Perspective
5.2. Back to Arendt: The "Right to Have Rights" and the EU-Turkey Statement
CHAPTER VI
Conclusion: Rethinking Rightlessness
REFERENCES