Produktbild: Emancipating International Law
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Emancipating International Law Confronting the Violence of Racialized Boundaries

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

05.10.2026

Verlag

Oxford Academic

Seitenzahl

528

Maße (L/B/H)

24/16,5/3,5 cm

Gewicht

930 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-893557-5

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

05.10.2026

Verlag

Oxford Academic

Seitenzahl

528

Maße (L/B/H)

24/16,5/3,5 cm

Gewicht

930 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-893557-5

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: GPSR Kontakt

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  • Produktbild: Emancipating International Law
    • Beyond Silence: Confronting Racial Hierarchies in International Law

    • Part I. Situating International Law's Racism Problem

    • 1: Mohsen al Attar: The Racialized Epistemology of International Law: From White Ignorance to Black Dignity

    • 2: Folúkẹ¿and Ifejola Adébísí: Disrupting International Law's Colonial Afterlives of Human Property: Educating for a World Beyond Racial Capitalism and Unending Apartheids

    • 3: Jason Haynes: Racialized Extractivism: A Tale of Fetishism, Narcissism, Primitive Accumulation, and Expropriation

    • 4: Harrison Otieno Mbori: The Inequalities of Sovereign Equality

    • 5: Sarah Riley Case and Frédéric Mégret: The Colour of Jus Cogens

    • Part II. The Tools, Techniques, and Technologies of Legalized Racial Inequality

    • 6: Shahab Saqib: Race as Citizenship Personified: Illuminating the Ghosts of Racial Discrimination in International Law

    • 7: Dimitrios A Kourtis: A Racialized Existence: Lessons from Palestine and the Genocide Convention

    • 8: Faisal al-Asaad: Settler Colonialism, Race, and International Law: Lessons from the Frontier

    • 9: Jinan Bastaki: Survive the Journey Only to Succumb to International Refugee Law

    • 10: Nciko wa Nciko: How the UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement Fail Climate and Racial Justice: Time for the Kampala Convention?

    • Part III. A Right to be Free From Racism

    • 11: Raghavi Viswanath: The Intersection of Race and Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights

    • 12: Tess Sheldon, Ruby Dhand, and Roxanne Mykitiuk: Racialized Ableism and the Need for Intersectional Discourse and Action

    • 13: Paulina Jimenez Fregoso: De-essentializing Race: Intersectionality as a Feminist Approach in International Human Rights Law

    • 14: Karla Schröter: Colonial Fantasies in the European Court of Human Rights

    • Part IV. Antiracism in the Pluriverse

    • 15: Suraj Girijashanker: Indian Approaches to Racism and Related Forms of Subordination under International Law: A Question of Interest Convergence

    • 16: Saul Takahashi: Japan: International Law as the Outward Looking Weapon

    • 17: Henrique Weil Afonso: Decolonial Fissures: Looking from and Beyond Brazil's Colour Lines

    • 18: Yang Han: Norm Entrepreneurship at the UN: Addressing Racial Equality Across Borders and the South-North Divide

    • Part V. Taking the Struggle(s) Forward

    • 19: Darryl Li: From Captives to Enslaved: International Law and the Making of the (Non)Human

    • 20: Kamya Vishwanath: Bodies of Knowledge: Re-framing Emancipation in International Law through Dalit Praxis

    • 21: Radha D'Souza: Racism, (Neo)Colonialism, and International Law: A Field in Search of a Philosophy?

    • 22: E Tendayi Achiume, Asl¿Ü Bâli, and S Priya Morley: Conceptualizing Race and Resisting Racism in International Law

    • 23: Claire Smith: Unburdening White Women: Antiracist Feminist Praxis as Revolution

    • 24: Dylan Asafo: The Slow and Benevolent Violence of International Law: An Oceanian Perspective