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Download Full Text (27.3 MB)
Download Cover and Front Matter (3.4 MB)
Download Contents (63 KB)
Download Table of Treaties (61 KB)
Download Table of Non-formally Binding International Instruments and Table of Jurisprudence (84 KB)
Download Table of Jurisprudence (67 KB)
Download Conversation between Louise Arimatsu and Christine Chinkin (86 KB)
Download Part I Introductory Concepts: Gender and Peace -- Introduction (44 KB)
Download Gender (138 KB)
Download Peace in International Law (115 KB)
Download Part II: Gendering Peace Through the Past -- Introduction (161 KB)
Download Peace in the UN Decade for Women (196 KB)
Download Revisiting the Past: Peace at Beijing and Beyond (173 KB)
Download Women, Disarmament and Peace (122 KB)
Download Part III: Obstacles to Gendered Peace and Equality -- Introduction (102 KB)
Download Silence as an Obstacle to Gendered Peace and Equality (139 KB)
Download Misogyny and Sexism in the Digital Age (124 KB)
Download Crisis and Emergency: Entrenching Gender Systems and Militarism (152 KB)
Download Part IV: Strategic Practice: Gendering Law -- Introduction (122 KB)
Download Strategic Practice: Peace and Equality Through International Law (162 KB)
Download Strategic Practice: Giving Effect to Legal Change (137 KB)
Download Strategic Practices: ‘Doing Our Own Thing’ (91 KB)
Download Enriching Strategic Practice: Some Reflections (86 KB)
Download Part V: Transforming International Law -- Introduction (86 KB)
Download Transformative Reparations and Gendered Peace (157 KB)
Download Searching for Peace in Teaching International Law (127 KB)
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Description
Two leading feminist lawyers reflect on gender in international law to set out what a gendered peace might look like and its impact on international law in this open access book.
In order to challenge orthodoxies, the book takes an unconventional approach, merging personal reflections, expert essays, and interviews. It throws the disciplinary net wide, drawing on international law, gender studies, international relations and history. The authors, undisputed global leaders in the field, challenge the reader to unlearn international law, in order to relearn it in a way that makes it more fit for purpose in the contemporary world. This seminal work is a clarion call to think about international law in a new and transformative way.
Publication Date
2024
Publisher
Hart Publishing
City
Oxford U.K.
Keywords
gender and peace, UN Decade for Women, disarmament, misogyny, sexism, gendering law, transformative reparations, gendered peace
Disciplines
International Law | Law and Gender | Military, War, and Peace
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Louise Arimatsu and Chinkin, Christine M. Gendered Peace Through International Law. 1 ed. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2024.
Comments
The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by the London School of Economics & Political Science.
For additional material on Gendered Peace Through International Law visit https://www.bloomsburyonlineresources.com/gendered-peace-through-international-law