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The Case for Permanent Residency for Frontline Workers

Mollie Gerver

2021American Political Science Review53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article presents the case for granting permanent residency to those experiencing significant risks throughout the COVID-19 pandemic to increase citizens’ safety. Increasing safety comes in many forms: directly, as when doctors, paramedics, and nurses assist patients, and indirectly, as when farmworkers produce life-sustaining food, garbage collectors protect sanitation, and social workers respond to emergency calls. A range of such workers are owed gratitude-derived duties from citizens that are best fulfilled via permanent residency. I defend this claim first for authorized migrants and then for unauthorized migrants, whose presence citizens would consent to if they were aware of the benefits they provide. Finally, I defend the claim that many frontline workers not owed gratitude are owed duties of justice, acquiring rights similar to those of permanent residency.

Topics & Concepts

GratitudeBusinessEconomic JusticeGarbageSanitationPublic relationsPolitical scienceMedicineLawPsychologySocial psychologyEngineeringWaste managementPathologyEmployment and Welfare StudiesPolitical Philosophy and Ethics
The Case for Permanent Residency for Frontline Workers | Litcius