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Citizenship Studies | 2011

From exile of citizens to deportation of non-citizens: ancient Greece as a mirror to illuminate a modern transition

Benjamin Gray

This article is an ancient Greek historians response to an invitation to reflect upon modern liberal democratic deportation. The article identifies a revealing contrast between ancient Greek city-states and their modern republican successors. In ancient Greece, institutionalised lawful expulsion of non-citizens was not a major concern. Rather, it was lawful expulsion of citizens which was a prominent political issue, comparable to modern liberal democratic deportation. Indeed, modern liberal democratic deportation and associated rhetoric were significantly foreshadowed in the ancient Greek politics of expulsion: Greeks used and justified lawful expulsion of citizens as a means of constructing and reinforcing both state power and abstract, rationalistic norms of citizenship. The article suggests the hypothesis that the contrast between the ancient and the modern situations can be explained by the modern prevalence of universalist human rights norms, not politically influential in ancient Greece. First, human rights norms exert pressures on modern liberal democratic states, unparalleled in ancient Greece, to integrate and assist outsiders. Deportation is partly a reaction against those pressures, of a type unnecessary in the ancient Greek world. Second, although the modern liberal democratic analogues of Classical republican ideas, partly derived from their Classical antecedents, encourage lawful citizen expulsion, the modern citizens inalienable human right to residence in his home state militates against it. Modern liberal democratic deportation of non-citizens, and associated rhetoric, can thus be interpreted partly as alternative outlets for the use of expulsion and exclusionary rhetoric to construct and reinforce complex norms of citizenship.


Journal of Refugee Studies | 2016

Exile, Refuge and the Greek Polis: Between Justice and Humanity

Benjamin Gray


Archive | 2015

Stasis and stability : exile, the polis, and political thought, c. 404-146 BC

Benjamin Gray


Routledge | 2016

Peace and Reconciliation in the Classical World

Benjamin Gray


Studi Ellenistici | 2013

The Polis becomes Humane? Philanthropia as a Cardinal Civic Virtue in Later Hellenistic Honorific Epigraphy and Historiography

Benjamin Gray


Archive | 2018

Ancient Greek History and Contemporary Social Science

Mirko Canevaro; Benjamin Gray; Andrew Erskine; Josiah Ober


Humanities research | 2018

Citizenship as Barrier and Opportunity for Ancient Greek and Modern Refugees

Benjamin Gray


Oxford University Press | 2017

The Hellenistic Reception of Classical Athenian Democracy and Political Thought

Mirko Canevaro; Benjamin Gray


Archive | 2017

Reconciliation in Later Classical and Post-Classical Greek cities: A question of peace and peacefulness?

Benjamin Gray


Archive | 2016

Civil War and Civic Reconciliation in a Small Greek Polis: Two Acts of the Same Drama?

Benjamin Gray

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