Description:
Our aim is to engage a global audience interested in critical, feminist, and postcolonial perspectives on contemporary and historical issues in international law and politics. The series aims to create a space for academic research and networking, bringing together scholars from various fields to discuss feminist and gender-centred issues in history and international law. Each session will feature a dialogue between two or more scholars to foster discussion and conversation.
Our inaugural session, "How to Write Feminist Histories of International Law?", will take place next Monday, October 21, 2024, at 5pm BST. We're thrilled to have Aoife Donoughe, Maria Drakopolou, Diane Marie Amann, and Gina Heathcote as our distinguished speakers for this session.
Full list of seminar topics:
October 21, 2024: How to Write Feminist Histories of International Law?
November 18, 2024: How to Gender the Public and Private Divide in International Law?
December 2, 2024: Women's Rights and Human Rights: Carceral Genealogies from CEDAW to Istanbul
January 13, 2025: Decolonial Methods: Gender, History and Law Through Black Literature
February 3, 2025: Decolonising Children's Rights and International Criminal Law: Human Rights Between Security and Empowerment
February 25, 2025: Gender and International Criminal Law: History, Victimhood and Transitional Justice
March 17, 2025: International Law and Colour Line: Is Palestine a Feminist Issue?
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For more information and required pre-registration, visit Warwick University's dedicated webpage.
To subscribe to the mailing list, email paola.zichi@warwick.ac.uk or Aisel.Omarova@warwick.ac.uk.