Teresa Hayter is a British author and activist. She is the author of three books: Aid as Imperialism, The Creation of World Poverty, and Open Borders: The Case Against Immigration Controls, as well as an early autobiography called Hayter of the Bourgeoisie.
In an interview with The Sunday Times in 1972, Hayter admitted that Hayter of the Bourgeoisie had only been published because the publisher Lord Longford "is a mate of my father". When asked what she was doing running a "left wing" bookshop in Leeds, she replied that "when the revolution comes I shall be helping man the barricades with guns and petrol bombs". The interview was quoted in On the Barricades, and Off, by Melvin J. Lasky.
Views on migration controls and refugee rights
Hayter has been a vocal campaigner and activist for greater refugee rights and the loosening of migration controls in general. Her book, Open Borders: The Case Against Immigration Controls made general arguments against migration controls and also pointed specifically to the circumstances of refugees. In the book and elsewhere, she has connected her activism for migration rights with her anti-racist views. The book is available for free online and has received some reviews. In addition to her books and media interviews and articles, Hayter has also made the case, in academic journals, for a world without borders. Hayter is at the helm of a campaign to close down Campsfield House, a detention centre in the United Kingdom. In March 2007, Hayter refused to share a podium with David Coleman of Migration Watch UK, and supported a petition by local free newspaper, the Oxford Star, calling on the Vice Chancellor of the University, John Hood, to "consider the suitability of Coleman's continued tenure as a Professor of the University, in light of his opinions and affiliations relating to immigration and eugenics."
Aid and poverty
Hayter wrote two books on the subject of the world order and its connection to poverty: Aid as Imperalism and The Creation of World Poverty. In the former, she criticized the lending policies of the World Bank while extolling the development approach of North Korea; the book was reviewed in The Spectator in 1972. The latter book was reviewed by Leading Light.
Reception
Hayter has been interviewed by a number of blogs and websites. She has penned a column for The Guardian and has been cited and quoted in The Guardian and other British publications on issues related to asylum seekers and refugees.