id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_p6hgmjki2jdxrlvwxp2wzg2sgy Penelope Andrews Research Handbook on Feminist Engagement in International Law. Edited by Susan Harris Rimmer and Kate Ogg. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, 2019. Pp. xxvii, 558. Index 2020 5 .pdf application/pdf 3176 177 31 College of Law, have compiled an important volume on feminist engagement with international extend their inquiries to areas not previously covered by feminist scholars of international law in A valuable inclusion in the introductory discussion is an empirical review of feminist international legal scholarship's contribution to conflicting perspectives regarding feminist scholarship in international law's disproportionate feminist approaches to international law, weighing the success of the contributions (their impact Regarding the successes of feminist international law scholars since the start of the new millennium, Harris Rimmer and Ogg point to the Harris Rimmer and Ogg also point to a contradiction: a growing despondency about the limited influence of feminists at the international law race theory, third world feminism, and queer theory) into feminist critiques of international law; For example, in her chapter examining the complete absence of feminist analysis of private international law, Mary Keyes, professor at Griffith "Feminist Engagement with International Law: ./cache/work_p6hgmjki2jdxrlvwxp2wzg2sgy.pdf ./txt/work_p6hgmjki2jdxrlvwxp2wzg2sgy.txt