Feminist scholarship in international law has generated debate between feminists, but little engagement from the disciplinary main-stream. This chapter addresses one strand of the internal debate, Janet Halley's argument that feminism has come to exercise considerable powerin international law and its institutions; and that it does so with little self-reflection, indeed denying its own influence by asserting an inauthentic under-dog status. After describing the place of feminist theorising in international law, and then Halley's critique, the chapter considers feminist scholarship and its oscillation between resistance to and compliance with international law in the context of state-building and democratisation. It argues that feminists hav...
In this conversation, we set out to ponder the question of what might be next for feminist scholarsh...
In this article, international law is viewed as a social and self-constituting phenomenon As the pro...
Since at least the mid 1990s and the Fourth World Conference for Women in Beijing, gender as an anal...
In the past decade, a sense of feminist 'success' has developed within the United Nations and intern...
The essays in this volume analyse feminism's positioning vis-à-vis international law and the current...
Feminist approaches to international law commence with a series of structural bias accounts of the i...
In this chapter, we address the current state of feminisms within international law, examining gende...
Over the past several years, legal scholars have extended feminist theory to many areas of the law, ...
C1 - Journal Articles RefereedAbstract This special issue of the Nordic Journal of International La...
In this chapter, we address the current state of feminisms within international law, examining gende...
The world of international relations and law is constantly changing. There is a risk of the systemat...
Feminist analysis in international law began to emerge two decades ago. It has taken many different ...
In recent years, feminist theory has turned its critical gaze to international law. By challenging ...
In this essay, the author wants to outline briefly both some of the ways in which the assumptions an...
Feminists have utilized manifestos and utopias in order to make important, often revolutionary, cont...
In this conversation, we set out to ponder the question of what might be next for feminist scholarsh...
In this article, international law is viewed as a social and self-constituting phenomenon As the pro...
Since at least the mid 1990s and the Fourth World Conference for Women in Beijing, gender as an anal...
In the past decade, a sense of feminist 'success' has developed within the United Nations and intern...
The essays in this volume analyse feminism's positioning vis-à-vis international law and the current...
Feminist approaches to international law commence with a series of structural bias accounts of the i...
In this chapter, we address the current state of feminisms within international law, examining gende...
Over the past several years, legal scholars have extended feminist theory to many areas of the law, ...
C1 - Journal Articles RefereedAbstract This special issue of the Nordic Journal of International La...
In this chapter, we address the current state of feminisms within international law, examining gende...
The world of international relations and law is constantly changing. There is a risk of the systemat...
Feminist analysis in international law began to emerge two decades ago. It has taken many different ...
In recent years, feminist theory has turned its critical gaze to international law. By challenging ...
In this essay, the author wants to outline briefly both some of the ways in which the assumptions an...
Feminists have utilized manifestos and utopias in order to make important, often revolutionary, cont...
In this conversation, we set out to ponder the question of what might be next for feminist scholarsh...
In this article, international law is viewed as a social and self-constituting phenomenon As the pro...
Since at least the mid 1990s and the Fourth World Conference for Women in Beijing, gender as an anal...