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Gender and Human Rights

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Gender and Human Rights Synopsis

The growth of the women's international human rights movement worldwide and its emergence as a field of study has led to a valuable but increasingly self-contained literature, often cut off from developments in feminist legal theory, on the one hand, and conceptions of the different legal contexts in which international human rights operate, on the other. This collection of essays brings together feminist scholars in a number of areas including international law, rights, citizenship, queer theory, constitutional law and migration studies to reflect on gender and human rights. The result is a series of fresh and sophisticated essays that situates women's international human rights in broader debates about feminism, rights and international society, providing a variety of methods and vantage points. The essays both offer perspectives on gender and human rights drawn from women's experiences with national laws and contribute to feminist analyses of law in such international and transnational arenas as war, colonialism and globalization.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780199260911
Publication date:
Author: Karen , Associate Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto Knop
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 266 pages
Series: Collected Courses of the Academy of European Law
Genres: Human rights, civil rights
Public international law: human rights
Feminism and feminist theory
Laws of specific jurisdictions and specific areas of law