Respect for outsiders? Respect for the law? The moral evaluation of high-scale issues by US immigration officers
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2000
Abstract
High-scale morality is the study of moral ideas and sentiments deployed in relations that encompass multiple, geographically or socially distant populaces. The envisioning of distant people, their attributed moral personhood, the evaluation of their perceived behaviour, and the rectification of wrongs through the use of powerful organizations are key topics in high-scale morality. High-scale morality differs from existing anthropological approaches that emphasize local ethnography or contrastive moral ideas; it addresses the moralization of issues like world hunger, the drug trade, or international migration. The officers of the US Immigration and Naturalization Service understand and evaluate legal and illegal immigrants, as well as directly enacting moral rectification for the US polity. As they resolve moral dilemmas on their job, they utilize pervasive models for moral thought and action in capitalist, individualist, stratified, and bureaucratized societies. The article finishes by considering directions in which anthropology can contribute to understanding the moral dimension of global issues. © Royal Anthropological Institute 2000.
Publication Title
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
Recommended Citation
Heyman, J.
(2000).
Respect for outsiders? Respect for the law? The moral evaluation of high-scale issues by US immigration officers.
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute,
6(4), 635-652.
http://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9655.00037
Retrieved from: https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/michigantech-p/11234