Indira Rosenthal
Gender and International Criminal Law
Herausgeber: Oosterveld, Valerie; S'Acouto, Susana
Indira Rosenthal
Gender and International Criminal Law
Herausgeber: Oosterveld, Valerie; S'Acouto, Susana
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This book analyses narrow definitions of gender in international criminal law. Jurisprudence blind spots are examined, such as sexual violence against men, and the gendered dimensions of forced marriage and reproductive crimes. It promotes a more nuanced notion of gender to improve accountability for war crimes, genocide and aggression.
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This book analyses narrow definitions of gender in international criminal law. Jurisprudence blind spots are examined, such as sexual violence against men, and the gendered dimensions of forced marriage and reproductive crimes. It promotes a more nuanced notion of gender to improve accountability for war crimes, genocide and aggression.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press (UK)
- Seitenzahl: 496
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Oktober 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 157mm x 239mm x 38mm
- Gewicht: 880g
- ISBN-13: 9780198871583
- ISBN-10: 0198871589
- Artikelnr.: 66157096
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Oxford University Press (UK)
- Seitenzahl: 496
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Oktober 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 157mm x 239mm x 38mm
- Gewicht: 880g
- ISBN-13: 9780198871583
- ISBN-10: 0198871589
- Artikelnr.: 66157096
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Indira Rosenthal consults widely on gender, international human rights and ICL. She has served as Gender Adviser and Legal Adviser with Amnesty International, Legal Counsel with Human Rights Watch's International Justice Program and as a senior government lawyer in the Australian Attorney-General's Department. She publishes on gender issues in her areas of specialism. Valerie Oosterveld is a Professor at the Faculty of Law, Western University (Canada) and the Associate Director of Western's Centre for Transitional Justice and Post-Conflict Reconstruction. She is a member of the Canadian Partnership for International Justice and has published widely on gender issues in ICL. Susana SáCouto directs the War Crimes Research Office and the Hague Summer Program at American University Washington College of Law, where she teaches courses on ICL, including a seminar on gender and ICL. She has advised and provided legal assistance on ICL issues to international, regional and domestic courts and publishes on issues at the intersection of gender and ICL.
* Misconceptions and Misunderstandings about Gender in International
Criminal Law
* 1: Indira Rosenthal, Valerie Oosterveld, Susana SáCouto: What is
'Gender' in International Criminal Law?
* 2: Judith Gardam, Michelle Jarvis: The Gendered Framework of
International Humanitarian Law and the Development of International
Criminal Law
* 3: Kirsten Campbell, Gorana Mlinarevi¿: A Feminist Critique of
Approaches to International Criminal Justice in the Age of Identity
Politics: A Case Study of Conflict-Related Sexual Violence
Prosecutions before the International Criminal Tribunal for the
Former Yugoslavia
* Expanding Approaches to Gender in International Criminal Law: Beyond
'Gender = Women' and 'Gender = Crimes of Sexual Violence'
* 4: Dubravka %Zarkov: Sexual Violence Against Men in Contemporary
Warfare
* 5: Gloria Atiba-Davies, Leo Nwoye: Children, Gender and International
Criminal Justice
* 6: Patricia Viseur-Sellers, Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum: The
International Crimes of Slavery and the Slave Trade: A Feminist
Critique
* 7: Lisa Davis, Danny Bradley: Victory for Women and LGBTIQ Rights
under International Criminal Law: Gender in the Draft Crimes against
Humanity Treaty
* 8: Melanie O'Brien: Gender Dimensions of Forced Marriage in
International Criminal Law
* 9: Rosemary Grey: Reproductive Crimes in International Criminal Law
* 10: Antonia Mulvey: Using International Criminal Law to Curb
Discriminatory Practices Against Females: The Case of Female Genital
Mutilation
* Engendering Justice: The Future of International Criminal Law
* 11: Jonathan O'Donohue, Rosemary Grey: 'Gender-Inclusivity' in the
International Criminal Court's First Reparation Proceedings
* 12: Daniela Kravetz: Gender and the Implementation of International
Criminal Law in the Latin American Region
* 13: Catherine O'Rourke: Fragmentation Fears or Interaction
Opportunities? The Role and Potential of International Human Rights
Law in Shaping International Criminal Law's Gender Jurisprudence
* 14: Helen Durham, Laura Green: Contemporary Armed Conflict and Gender
* 15: Dianne Otto: Is International Criminal Law Particularly
Impervious to Feminist Reconstruction? Legally Authorized Resistances
to Feminist Judging
Criminal Law
* 1: Indira Rosenthal, Valerie Oosterveld, Susana SáCouto: What is
'Gender' in International Criminal Law?
* 2: Judith Gardam, Michelle Jarvis: The Gendered Framework of
International Humanitarian Law and the Development of International
Criminal Law
* 3: Kirsten Campbell, Gorana Mlinarevi¿: A Feminist Critique of
Approaches to International Criminal Justice in the Age of Identity
Politics: A Case Study of Conflict-Related Sexual Violence
Prosecutions before the International Criminal Tribunal for the
Former Yugoslavia
* Expanding Approaches to Gender in International Criminal Law: Beyond
'Gender = Women' and 'Gender = Crimes of Sexual Violence'
* 4: Dubravka %Zarkov: Sexual Violence Against Men in Contemporary
Warfare
* 5: Gloria Atiba-Davies, Leo Nwoye: Children, Gender and International
Criminal Justice
* 6: Patricia Viseur-Sellers, Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum: The
International Crimes of Slavery and the Slave Trade: A Feminist
Critique
* 7: Lisa Davis, Danny Bradley: Victory for Women and LGBTIQ Rights
under International Criminal Law: Gender in the Draft Crimes against
Humanity Treaty
* 8: Melanie O'Brien: Gender Dimensions of Forced Marriage in
International Criminal Law
* 9: Rosemary Grey: Reproductive Crimes in International Criminal Law
* 10: Antonia Mulvey: Using International Criminal Law to Curb
Discriminatory Practices Against Females: The Case of Female Genital
Mutilation
* Engendering Justice: The Future of International Criminal Law
* 11: Jonathan O'Donohue, Rosemary Grey: 'Gender-Inclusivity' in the
International Criminal Court's First Reparation Proceedings
* 12: Daniela Kravetz: Gender and the Implementation of International
Criminal Law in the Latin American Region
* 13: Catherine O'Rourke: Fragmentation Fears or Interaction
Opportunities? The Role and Potential of International Human Rights
Law in Shaping International Criminal Law's Gender Jurisprudence
* 14: Helen Durham, Laura Green: Contemporary Armed Conflict and Gender
* 15: Dianne Otto: Is International Criminal Law Particularly
Impervious to Feminist Reconstruction? Legally Authorized Resistances
to Feminist Judging
* Misconceptions and Misunderstandings about Gender in International
Criminal Law
* 1: Indira Rosenthal, Valerie Oosterveld, Susana SáCouto: What is
'Gender' in International Criminal Law?
* 2: Judith Gardam, Michelle Jarvis: The Gendered Framework of
International Humanitarian Law and the Development of International
Criminal Law
* 3: Kirsten Campbell, Gorana Mlinarevi¿: A Feminist Critique of
Approaches to International Criminal Justice in the Age of Identity
Politics: A Case Study of Conflict-Related Sexual Violence
Prosecutions before the International Criminal Tribunal for the
Former Yugoslavia
* Expanding Approaches to Gender in International Criminal Law: Beyond
'Gender = Women' and 'Gender = Crimes of Sexual Violence'
* 4: Dubravka %Zarkov: Sexual Violence Against Men in Contemporary
Warfare
* 5: Gloria Atiba-Davies, Leo Nwoye: Children, Gender and International
Criminal Justice
* 6: Patricia Viseur-Sellers, Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum: The
International Crimes of Slavery and the Slave Trade: A Feminist
Critique
* 7: Lisa Davis, Danny Bradley: Victory for Women and LGBTIQ Rights
under International Criminal Law: Gender in the Draft Crimes against
Humanity Treaty
* 8: Melanie O'Brien: Gender Dimensions of Forced Marriage in
International Criminal Law
* 9: Rosemary Grey: Reproductive Crimes in International Criminal Law
* 10: Antonia Mulvey: Using International Criminal Law to Curb
Discriminatory Practices Against Females: The Case of Female Genital
Mutilation
* Engendering Justice: The Future of International Criminal Law
* 11: Jonathan O'Donohue, Rosemary Grey: 'Gender-Inclusivity' in the
International Criminal Court's First Reparation Proceedings
* 12: Daniela Kravetz: Gender and the Implementation of International
Criminal Law in the Latin American Region
* 13: Catherine O'Rourke: Fragmentation Fears or Interaction
Opportunities? The Role and Potential of International Human Rights
Law in Shaping International Criminal Law's Gender Jurisprudence
* 14: Helen Durham, Laura Green: Contemporary Armed Conflict and Gender
* 15: Dianne Otto: Is International Criminal Law Particularly
Impervious to Feminist Reconstruction? Legally Authorized Resistances
to Feminist Judging
Criminal Law
* 1: Indira Rosenthal, Valerie Oosterveld, Susana SáCouto: What is
'Gender' in International Criminal Law?
* 2: Judith Gardam, Michelle Jarvis: The Gendered Framework of
International Humanitarian Law and the Development of International
Criminal Law
* 3: Kirsten Campbell, Gorana Mlinarevi¿: A Feminist Critique of
Approaches to International Criminal Justice in the Age of Identity
Politics: A Case Study of Conflict-Related Sexual Violence
Prosecutions before the International Criminal Tribunal for the
Former Yugoslavia
* Expanding Approaches to Gender in International Criminal Law: Beyond
'Gender = Women' and 'Gender = Crimes of Sexual Violence'
* 4: Dubravka %Zarkov: Sexual Violence Against Men in Contemporary
Warfare
* 5: Gloria Atiba-Davies, Leo Nwoye: Children, Gender and International
Criminal Justice
* 6: Patricia Viseur-Sellers, Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum: The
International Crimes of Slavery and the Slave Trade: A Feminist
Critique
* 7: Lisa Davis, Danny Bradley: Victory for Women and LGBTIQ Rights
under International Criminal Law: Gender in the Draft Crimes against
Humanity Treaty
* 8: Melanie O'Brien: Gender Dimensions of Forced Marriage in
International Criminal Law
* 9: Rosemary Grey: Reproductive Crimes in International Criminal Law
* 10: Antonia Mulvey: Using International Criminal Law to Curb
Discriminatory Practices Against Females: The Case of Female Genital
Mutilation
* Engendering Justice: The Future of International Criminal Law
* 11: Jonathan O'Donohue, Rosemary Grey: 'Gender-Inclusivity' in the
International Criminal Court's First Reparation Proceedings
* 12: Daniela Kravetz: Gender and the Implementation of International
Criminal Law in the Latin American Region
* 13: Catherine O'Rourke: Fragmentation Fears or Interaction
Opportunities? The Role and Potential of International Human Rights
Law in Shaping International Criminal Law's Gender Jurisprudence
* 14: Helen Durham, Laura Green: Contemporary Armed Conflict and Gender
* 15: Dianne Otto: Is International Criminal Law Particularly
Impervious to Feminist Reconstruction? Legally Authorized Resistances
to Feminist Judging