'I Wouldn't Want to Be a Gender Expert': Gender Experts in Peace Mediation
In: International Negotiation 2022
38 Ergebnisse
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In: International Negotiation 2022
SSRN
In: Forthcoming in Rethinking Peacekeeping, Gender Equality and Collective Security (eds. Gina Heathcote and Dianne Otto)(Palgrave, 2014).
SSRN
Posthuman feminism as a theoretical and methodological approach to international law / Matilda Arvidsson -- Flat ontology and differentiation : in defence of Bennett's vital materialism, and some thoughts towards decolonial new materialisms for international law / Anna Grear -- Aesthetics, new materialism, and legal matter : the 'art' of Anglo-American colonialism / Delaney Mitchell -- The common heritage of kin-kind / Emily Jones, Cristian van Eijk, and Gina Heathcote -- A monument to E. G. Wakefield : new and historical materialist dialogues for a posthuman International law / Jessie Hohmann and Christine Schwöbel-Patel -- Neither national nor international : a posthumanist retelling of tax sovereignty / Hedvig Lärka -- After homo narrans : botany, international law, and senegambia in early racial capitalist worldmaking / Vanja Hamzić -- Terraqueous feminisms and the international law of the sea / Gina Heathcote -- Becoming common -- ecological resistance, refusal, reparation / Marie Petersmann -- The war on drugs as the war on the non-human / Kojo Koram and Oscar Guardiola-Rivera -- Supplanting anthropocentric legalities : can the rule of law tolerate intensive animal agriculture? / Maneesha Deckha -- Will human rights save the 'anthropos' from the 'Anthropocene'? limitations of human rights strategies in responding to the climate crisis / Jasmijn Leeuwenkamp.
In: Global constitutionalism: human rights, democracy and the rule of law, Band 12, Heft 3, S. 403-411
ISSN: 2045-3825
AbstractFeminists and women activists use manifestos to express their frustrations with legal and political systems, expose the harms suffered in their lived experiences under patriarchy, colonialism and capitalism, and call for radical political, legal and social change. This special issue on feminist manifestos and global constitutionalism considers the role of feminist manifestos in global constitutionalism. It interrogates the role of feminist manifestos in bringing about legal and political reform, their role as historical texts and sources of global constitutionalization, and their limitations as tools that are potentially both exclusionary and de-political. In their article, Ruth Houghton and Aoife O'Donoghue outline a role for feminist manifestos within feminist approaches to constituent power. Sheri Labenski uncovers from the archives the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom manifesto from 1924 and the outline for a 'New International Order'. Gina Heathcote and Lucia Kula centre Lusophone African feminist action in Luanda, Angola, to problematize an approach to feminist manifestos that reiterates dominant feminisms, and instead argue for active silence by those more dominant feminist voices. In her conclusion to the special issue, Emily Jones uses posthuman feminism to interrogate and critique the claim of universality in global constitutionalism. Across this special issue, key themes emerge: the potential of inclusion and exclusion, and the role of manifesto as a method in knowledge production.
In: Handbooks of research methods in law series
Part I:Rethinking methods --How to defend international legal method? /Richard Collins --Transatlantic divisions in methods of inquiry about law : what it means for international law /John Linarelli --International legal methods : working for a tragic and cynical routine /Jean d'Aspremont --Methodology : writing about how we do research /Sundhya Pahuja --Is international legal research international? /Rossana Deplano --Part II:Doctrinal --International legal positivist research methods /Jörg Kammerhofer --Microwaving dreams? : why there is no point in reheating the Hart-Dworkin debate for international law /Jason Beckett --Revisiting the New Haven methodology from an international law and policy perspective /Fozia Nazir Lone --Applying a natural law-method to international law /Jacob Giltaij --Marxist international law methodology? /Bill Bowring --International law and nervous states in the age of anger, the collapse of legal formalism and a return to natural law /Anthony Carty --Part III:Empirical and socio-legal --The computational analysis of international law /Wolfgang Alschner --Process-tracing the meaning of international human rights law /Natalie R. Davidson --Experiments in international law and the efficacy of international fact-finding : evidence from the U.S. and Israel /Shiri Krebs --Tracing influence in international law : beyond the antagonism between doctrine of law and social science /Maiko Meguro --Part IV:Comparative --Comparative international constitutional law and its methodology /Nicholas Tsagourias --Exploring African Union law through the lenses of comparative law : a comparative analysis with European Union law /Olufemi Amao and Chidebe Matthew Nwankwo --Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA) as an empirical method for international law /Pablo Castillo-Ortiz --Part V:Interdisciplinary research --From interdisciplinary to x-disciplinary methodology of international law /Outi Korhonen --Economic analysis of international law /Anne van Aaken and Ivana Stradner --The philosophy of international law /Stephen Riley --Third World approaches to international law : between theory and method /Justine Bendel --Global constitutionalism as a method in international economic law /Andreas R. Ziegler and Xinyan Zhao --Sociological objectivism : still relevant? /Vassilis P. Tzevelekos and Antal Berkes --Feminist methodologies /Gina Heathcote and Paola Zichi --What are you looking at? : documentary film and international law /Wouter Werner --International law and diplomacy /Iakovos Iakovidis.
In: German yearbook of international law: Jahrbuch für internationales Recht, Band 62, Heft 1, S. 649-680
ISSN: 2195-7304
W. A. Schabas, The Trial of the Kaiser, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2018, 432 pages, ISBN 9780198833857. (Prof. J. M. Reijntjes, Prof.em. in Criminal Law, The Open University of the Netherlands and the University of Curaçao.)
Harold Hongju Koh, The Trump Administration and International Law, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2018, 232 pages, ISBN 9780190912185. (David l. Sloss, John A. and Elizabeth H. Sutro Professor of Law, Santa Clara University School of Law)
Gina Heathcote, Feminist Dialogues on International Law: Success, Tensions, Futures, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2019, 256 pages, ISBN 9780199685103. (Aoife O'Donoghue, Professor of International Law and Governance, Durham University Law School)
Steven Wheatley, The Idea of International Human Rights Law, Oxford University Press, New York 2019, 204 pages, ISBN 978-0-19-874984-4. (Mark A. Chinen, Professor of Law at the Seattle University School of Law and a Fellow of the Fred T. Korematsu Center for Law and Equality)
Marco Longobardo, The Use of Force in Occupied Territory, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2018, xxix+320 pages, ISBN 9781108473415. (Michael Bothe, Professor Emeritus of Public Law, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main)
Shavana Musa, Victim Reparation Under the Ius Post Bellum: An Historical and Normative Perspective, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2019, 290 pages, ISBN 9781108471732. (Dr. Jens Iverson, Assistant Professor of Public International Law, Leiden Law School, Leiden University)
Russell Buchan, Cyber Espionage and International Law, Hart, Oxford 2019, xxviii+219 pages, ISBN 9781782257363. (François Delerue, Research Fellow in Cyberdefense and International Law, Institut de Recherche stratégique de l'Ecole militaire (IRSEM) and Lecturer, Sciences Po Paris)
Alejandro Rodiles, Coalitions of the Willing and International Law: The Interplay Between Formality and Informality, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2018, xx+287 pages, ISBN 978-1-10-849365-9. (Matteo Tondini, Legal Advisor and Researcher Member, Italian Group, International Society for Military Law and the Law of War)
Cindy Wittke, Law in the Twilight: International Courts and Tribunals, the Security Council and the Internationalisation of Peace Agreements Between State and Non-State Parties, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2018, 244 pages, ISBN 9781108335676. (Kimana Zulueta-Fülscher, Head of International IDEA's MyConstitution Programme (Yangon, Myanmar))
P. Chandrasekhara Rao and Philippe Gautier, The International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea: Law, Practice and Procedure, Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham 2018, xxvii+363 pages, ISBN 9781786433008. (Valentin J. Schatz, Research Associate, Chair of International Law of the Sea and International Environmental Law, Public International Law and Public Law (Alexander Proelß), Faculty of Law, University of Hamburg)
Lloyd Freeburn, Regulating International Sport. Power, Authority and Legitimacy, Brill/Nijhoff, Leiden 2018, 277 pages, ISBN 978-90-04-37978-7. (Christian J. Tams, Chair of International Law, University of Glasgow; Director, Glasgow Centre of International Law & Security)
In: Publications on ocean development
In: Includes bibliographical references and index 88504
In: International Law E-Books Online, Collection 2019, ISBN: 9789004390843
Front Matter -- Copyright page -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- Table of Cases -- Table of Treaties -- Notes on Contributors -- Introduction: Gender and the Law of the Sea – Oceans Apart? /Irini Papanicolopulu -- The General Framework -- Gender and the Law of the Sea: a Global Perspective /Gabriele Goettsche-Wanli -- Feminism and the Law of the Sea: a Preliminary Inquiry /Gina V. Heathcote -- Elisabeth Mann Borgese, Gender and the Law of the Sea /Patricia Mallia and David Testa -- Mermaids and Utopias: the High Seas as Feminist Space? /Loveday Hodson -- Some Doubts on the Gender Implications of the Law of the Sea /Tullio Scovazzi -- The UN Fish Stocks Agreement as a Metaphor, or the Law of the Sea as a Gendered Process /Liesbeth Lijnzaad -- Gender and Maritime Activities -- Protecting Women Fishers: the Gender Parameters of Labour Rights at Sea /Maria Gavouneli -- Sustainable Development and Fisheries with Special Emphasis on Gender Equality /Gabriela A. Oanta -- Feminism, Nature and the Post-Human: toward a Critical Analysis of the International Law of the Sea Governing Marine Living Resources Management /Alice Ollino -- Human Trafficking and IUUF: Legal and Gender Implications /Vasco Becker-Weinberg -- Migration at Sea: Some Gender-Related Remarks on the United Nations Protocols on Smuggling and Trafficking /Francesca Mussi -- The 2006 Maritime Labour Convention: a Cautious Step towards Gender Awareness? /Ioannis Stribis -- Advancing 'Good Practices' that Promote Gender Equality in the Maritime Sector /Momoko Kitada -- Women at War at Sea: How International Humanitarian Law Provides for the Protection of Female Members of the Armed Forces at Sea /Vanessa Murphy -- Climate Change, Oceans and Gender /Nilufer Oral -- Back Matter -- Index.
By any measure, Judith Gardam has accomplished much in her professional life and is rightly acknowledged by scholars throughout the world as an expert in her many fields of diverse interest — including international law, energy law and feminist theory. This book celebrates her academic life and work with twelve essays from leading scholars in Gardam's fields of expertise.