Epilogue: The Scandal of the Refugee: Some Reflections on the "Inter" of International Relations

Authors

  • Michael Dillon University of Lancaster

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25071/1920-7336.21998

Keywords:

refugees, forced migration, philosophy, politics, international relations, ontology, identity

Abstract

The refugee is a scandal for philosophy in that the refugee recalls the radical instability of meaning and the incalculability of the human. The refugee is a scandal for politics also, however, in that the advent of the refugee is always a reproach to the formation of the political order subjectivity which necessarily gives rise to the refugee. The scandal is intensified for any politics of identity which presupposes that the goal of politics is the realization of sovereign identity. The principal argument, then, is that what I will call the scandal of the refugee illuminates both the fundamental ontological determinations of international politics and the character of political action, because the refugee is both a function of the intentional political destruction of the ontological horizons of people's always already heterogeneous worlds, and effects an equally fundamental deconstruction of the ontological horizons which constitute the equally heterogeneous worlds into which, as refugees, these people are precipitated. It is precisely on this concrete and corporeal site that both the ontological horizons and the allied political decision-making of modern politics are thrown into stark relief and profoundly called into question. For it is precisely here that the very actions of modern politics both create and address the incidence of its own massive and self-generated, political abjection. If that is one of the principal ends of international relations, one is forced to ask, what does it take as its beginning? If, in other words, the vernacular political architecture of modern international power commonly produces forcibly displaced people globally, one is inclined to ask about the foundations upon which that architecture is itself based.

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Published

1998-12-01

How to Cite

Dillon, M. (1998). Epilogue: The Scandal of the Refugee: Some Reflections on the "Inter" of International Relations. Refuge: Canada’s Journal on Refugees, 17(6), 30–40. https://doi.org/10.25071/1920-7336.21998

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