The Ethics of Return Migration and Education

Date: 

Thursday, April 19, 2018, 4:30pm to 6:30pm

Location: 

Larsen Hall G01, Harvard Graduate School of Education

Juan EspindolaJuan Espindola
Assistant Professor in the Education Program
Center for Research and Teaching in Economics (CIDE), Mexico City

The presentation will argue that normative theories of immigration fail to appreciate that children of returning migrants (for example, of Mexican migrants returning to their homeland) ought to benefit from educational provisions addressing needs that are particular to their situation. Since these children may be forced to move between two societies (their parents’ homeland and the host society), they have a right to receive an education that not only allows them to integrate into the host society, but also that prepares them to transition between, and develop fully in, both societies. The duty to provide for this right must be discharged jointly by the two nations involved in the migratory process.

Speaker Biography:
Juan Espindola is an Assistant Professor in the Education Program at the Center for Research and Teaching in Economics (CIDE) in Mexico City. As a political theorist and author of Transitional Justice after German Reunification. Exposing Unofficial Collaborators (Cambridge University Press, 2015), he also researches private schooling and educational equality.

Discussant:
Tatiana Geron, HGSE Doctoral Candidate