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Köp båda 2 för 4160 krSusan Harris Rimmer and Kate Ogg have compiled an important volume on feminist engagement with international law. The editors build on recent research and scholarship produced on the subject, but also extend their inquiries to areas not previously covered by feminist scholars of international law in great detail, but which are of significance to the corpus of international law scholarship. . . . For those who teach, research, practice, or otherwise engage with international law, this volume is a useful source and a notable contribution to the literature. -- Penelope Andrews, American Journal of International Law This specialised expert text is a must have for anyone, wishing to better appreciate the opportunity feminist engagement with international law offers. It is plain that feminist engagement with any area of the law offers an exploration beyond women as actors. It is a distinct feature of this Research Handbook, and a particular success of its editors, the diversity of theoretical approaches and different methodologies outlined for the reader. A feminist approach is not singular and is instead best viewed as a rich web of different approaches and methodologies, which lend themselves particularly nicely to interdisciplinary research, embedded in the broader context. Readers are invited to explore this Research Handbook, as it is almost a guarantee that any reader, interested in international law, will find at least one contribution relevant to their own research, if not more. -- Feminist Legal Studies This is a highly recommended Research Handbook, -- Metka Potonik, Wolverhampton Law Journal
Edited by Susan Harris Rimmer, Associate Professor, Griffith University Law School, Brisbane and Kate Ogg, Senior Lecturer, ANU College of Law, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia
Contents: Foreword Hilary Charlesworth 1. Introduction Kate Ogg and Susan Harris Rimmer 2. On Women, Peace and Security Sima Samar Part I: Diversifying Feminist Engagement with International Law 3. Women as Maker of International Law: Towards feminist diplomacy Susan Harris Rimmer 4. Wildlife and International Law: Can feminism transform our relationship with nature? Katie Woolaston 5. Gender, Climate Change and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Rowena Maguire 6. Can Global Constitutionalisation be Feminist? Aoife ODonoghue and Ruth Houghton 7. Women in Private International Law Mary Keyes 8. Gender, Disasters and International Law Gabrielle Simm 9. Sexing consent in international law Siobhn Airey 10. Practitioner Perspective State Aid Prohibition as an Instrument in the Gender War Promoting Work for Women in the European Union? Pamela Finckenberg-Broman Part II: Making Feminist Engagement with International Law More Influential: Not just talking to ourselves 11. The Future of Feminist Engagement with Refugee Law: From the margins to the centre and out of the Pink Ghetto? Kate Ogg 12. Women and the International Court of Justice Ekaterina Yahyaoui Krivenko 13. Gender just judging in international criminal courts: New directions for research Rosemary Grey and Louise Chappell 14. Revisiting the category women Jaya Ramji-Nogales 15. A Feminist Human Security-Human Rights Lens: Expanding womens engagement with international law Dorothy Estrada-Tanck 16. The future of feminist international legal scholarship in a neoliberal university: doing law differently? Ntina Tzouvala 17. Practitioner Perspective Women and international treaty making: the example of standard-setting in the International Labour Organization Jane Aeberhard-Hodges Part III: Feminist Engagement with International Law: Improving Womens Lives 18. Challenging gendered economic and social inequalities: An analysis of the role of trade and financial liberalisation in deepening inequalities, and of the capacity of economic and social rights to redress them Emma Larking 19. Looking to the Future: Gender, Health and International Law Belinda Bennett and Sara Davies 20. Oral history as empirical corrective: Including womens experiences in international law Kim Rubenstein and Anne Isaac 21. Violence against Women and Social and Economic Rights: Deepening the Connections Beth Goldblatt 22. Feminist Time and International Law of the Everyday Mary Hansel 23. Practitioner Perspective Feminism in court: Practical solutions for tackling the wicked problem of womens invisibility in criminal justice Felicity Gerry QC Part IV: Building Bridges with other Critical Theories 24. The Maputo Protocol and the Reconciliation of Gender and Culture in Africa Jing Geng 25. Sex/Gender is Fluid, What Now for Feminism and International Human Rights Law? A Call to Queer the Foundations Kathryn McNeilly 26. Matri-legal Feminism: An African Feminist Response to International Law Josephine Jarpa Dawuni 27. Frames of Violence and the Violence of Frames: Setting a Feminist Critical Agenda for Transnational Rituals of Speaking Mariana Prandini Assis 28. Third World Approaches to International Law: Feminists' Engagement with International Law and Decolonial Theory" Giovanna Maria Frisso 29. Indigenous Women and International Law Veronica Fynn Bruey 30. Reimagining Feminist Engagements with Internationl Law Kamala Chandrakirana Afterword Dianne Otto Index