- Hilary Charlesworth, Foreword
- Kate Ogg & Susan Harris Rimmer, Introduction
- Sima Samar, On Women, Peace and Security
- Susan Harris Rimmer, Women as Maker of International Law: Towards feminist diplomacy
- Katie Woolaston, Wildlife and International Law: Can feminism transform our relationship with nature?
- Rowena Maguire, Gender, Climate Change and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
- Aoife O’Donoghue & Ruth Houghton, Can Global Constitutionalisation be Feminist?
- Mary Keyes, Women in Private International Law
- Gabrielle Simm, Gender, Disasters and International Law
- Siobhán Airey, ‘Sexing’ consent in international law
- Pamela Finckenberg-Broman, Practitioner Perspective: State Aid Prohibition as an Instrument in the Gender War – Promoting Work for Women in the European Union?
- Kate Ogg, The Future of Feminist Engagement with Refugee Law: From the margins to the centre and out of the ‘Pink Ghetto’?
- Ekaterina Yahyaoui Krivenko, Women and the International Court of Justice
- Rosemary Grey & Louise Chappell, ‘Gender just judging’ in international criminal courts: New directions for research
- Jaya Ramji-Nogales, Revisiting the category ‘women’
- Dorothy Estrada-Tanck, A Feminist Human Security-Human Rights Lens: Expanding women’s engagement with international law
- Ntina Tzouvala, The future of feminist international legal scholarship in a neoliberal university: doing law differently?
- Jane Aeberhard-Hodges, Practitioner Perspective: Women and international treaty making – the example of standard-setting in the International Labour Organization
- Emma Larking, Challenging gendered economic and social inequalities: An analysis of the role of trade and financial liberalisation in deepening inequalities, and of the capacity of economic and social rights to redress them
- Belinda Bennett & Sara Davies, Looking to the Future: Gender, Health and International Law
- Kim Rubenstein & Anne Isaac, Oral history as empirical corrective: Including women’s experiences in international law
- Beth Goldblatt, Violence against Women and Social and Economic Rights: Deepening the Connections
- Mary Hansel, Feminist Time and International Law of the Everyday
- Felicity Gerry, Practitioner Perspective: Feminism in court – Practical solutions for tackling the wicked problem of women’s invisibility in criminal justice
- Jing Geng, The Maputo Protocol and the Reconciliation of Gender and Culture in Africa Kathryn McNeilly, Sex/Gender is Fluid, What Now for Feminism and International Human Rights Law? A Call to Queer the Foundations
- Josephine Jarpa Dawuni, Matri-legal Feminism: An African Feminist Response to International Law
- Mariana Prandini Assis, Frames of Violence and the Violence of Frames: Setting a Feminist Critical Agenda for Transnational Rituals of Speaking
- Giovanna Maria Frisso, Third World Approaches to International Law: Feminists' Engagement with International Law and Decolonial Theory"
- Veronica Fynn Bruey, Indigenous Women and International Law
- Kamala Chandrakirana, Reimagining Feminist Engagements with International Law
- Dianne Otto, Afterword
Tuesday, April 30, 2019
Harris Rimmer & Ogg: Research Handbook on Feminist Engagement with International Law
Susan Harris Rimmer (Griffith Univ. - Law) & Kate Ogg (Australian National Univ. - Law) have published Research Handbook on Feminist Engagement with International Law (Edward Elgar Publishing 2019). Contents include: