‘Less than human’: the detention of irregular immigrants in Malta

Author:

DeBono Daniela

Abstract

The treatment of irregular migrants in Malta is problematic from a human rights perspective, for it contravenes the principle of universalism that is intrinsic to human rights philosophy. Malta is unusual among states in that it imposes mandatory detention on such migrants, including asylum seekers. Based on a reading of foundational documents of the modern human rights movement, especially the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the article argues that the principle of human dignity underlies the concept of human rights, but that the bypassing of this principle enables the Maltese government to continue its detention policies while claiming to uphold human rights. It is an approach contested by NGOs in this area, which point to the dehumanising effects of detention on migrants. It is not just the appalling conditions in which migrants are held that renders their lives miserable, but the dehumanisation produced by detention itself.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Social Sciences,Sociology and Political Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Archaeology,Anthropology,Archaeology,Cultural Studies

Reference8 articles.

1. Malta’s human rights record prior to 2002 with regards to irregular migrants is described in pp. 259–62 of the following chapter: Daniela DeBono, ‘“Human Rights for the Maltese First”: irregular migration and human rights in Malta’, in Xuereb P. G. (ed.), Migration and Asylum in Malta and the European Union: rights and realities 2002 to 2011 (Msida, Malta University Press, 2012), pp. 257–75.

2. Glendon Mary Ann, A World Made New: Eleanor Roosevelt and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (New York, Random House, 2001), pp. 145–6. Italics in original text.

3. Introduction to a Conversation

4. UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, ‘Annex to the Press Release’, UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention concludes visit to Malta (United Nations, Geneva, 26 January 2009), p. 3.

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