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Book Title: Research Handbook on Feminist Engagement with International Law
Editor(s): Harris Rimmer, Susan; Ogg, Kate
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
ISBN: 9781785363917
Section Title: Afterword: The future(s) of feminist engagement with international law
Author(s): Otto, Dianne
Number of pages: 4
Extract:
Afterword: The future(s) of feminist engagement with international law Dianne Otto
Nearly two decades into the 21st century, it is clear that at least some feminist ideas have found their way into international legal
and political institutions, influencing the development of the law, as well as its procedures and practices. This inclusion has been
hard won. In many instances, it has relied on grass roots women's movements organising nationally, regionally and internationally
to demand change. Yet political pressure from outside international institutions, while crucial, is not alone enough. Feminist change
also needs supportive insiders, such as state representatives, people working within UN institutions and agencies, human rights treaty
bodies, tribunal members, practitioners and others. That feminism has had an impact means that in some fields of international law,
feminists are no longer `just talking to ourselves' although marginalisation is an ever-present danger. The earlier relegation of
feminist perspectives to the field of human rights law specifically to `women's rights' has been roundly challenged,
with feminists now engaging critically with the laws of war, international humanitarian law, environmental law, trade law, private
international law, refugee law, international criminal law, labour law and many others, as this volume so amply demonstrates. Yet,
while there is much to be celebrated, the embrace of certain feminist ideas by international legal and political institutions has
come at some cost to feminist hopes for a transformed international order, in which peace is reimagined outside the `frames of war'1
and every human ...
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ELECD/2019/371.html