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E-raamat: Queer Encounters with International Law: Lives, Communities, Subjectivities

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"This book focuses on queer people and their encounters with international law. Traversing a wide range of topics, from trans discrimination and conversion therapy to sadomasochism and abolitionism, this book asks questions about the (im)possibility of freedom and equality for queer communities in the world, and the role that different areas of international law have to play in such a pursuit. It considers how queer lives and bodies are rendered legible or illegible to law through how we define concepts such as 'gender [ identity]' or 'private life'. It also reflects on whether legal activism focused on LGBTIQA+ rights can ever reflect the insights of queer theory. The book engages with new issues in international law, such as recent contestation over themeaning of 'gender' in international human rights law and international criminal law. It also showcases the diversity of approaches to queering international law that are emerging. While some chapters offer a critique of international law's violent and exclusionary tendencies, others re-invest in international law as a tool in the struggle for queer liberation by seeking to re-imagine it in queer directions. The questions addressed in this book are wide ranging and approached differently by the authors. However, all centre on the complex relationship between international law, queer theory, and queer lives and what the future holds for these encounters going forward. This collection of queer encounters with international law will be invaluable to scholars of international law, human rights, and international relations with an interest in critical approaches to these areas; as well as to researchers, activists, and practitioners working in cultural, gender, and sexuality studies"--

This book focuses on queer people and their encounters with international law.

Traversing a wide range of topics, from trans discrimination and conversion therapy to sadomasochism and abolitionism, this book asks questions about the (im)possibility of freedom and equality for queer communities in the world and the role that different areas of international law have to play in such a pursuit. It considers how queer lives and bodies are rendered legible or illegible to the law through how we define concepts such as ‘gender [ identity]’ or ‘private life’. It also reflects on whether legal activism focused on LGBTIQA+ rights can ever reflect the insights of queer theory. The book engages with new issues in international law, such as recent contestation over the meaning of ‘gender’ in international human rights law and international criminal law. It also showcases the diversity of approaches to queering international law that are emerging. While some chapters offer a critique of international law’s violent and exclusionary tendencies, others re-invest in international law as a tool in the struggle for queer liberation by seeking to re-imagine it in queer directions. The questions addressed in this book are wide-ranging and approached differently by the authors. However, all centre on the complex relationship between international law, queer theory, and queer lives and what the future holds for these encounters going forward.

This collection of queer encounters with international law will be invaluable to scholars of international law, human rights, and international relations with an interest in critical approaches to these areas, as well as to researchers, activists, and practitioners working in cultural, gender, and sexuality studies.



This book focuses on queer people and their encounters with international law.

1. (Re)Queering International Law Tamsin Phillipa Paige and Claerwen
OHara PART 1: Queer Critiques of International and Regional Human Rights Law
2. The Precarity of Trans Survival: Suicidality and the Right to Life Matteo
Bassetti
3. Vague Comparisons and Unstable Grounds: The European Court of
Human Rights and the Prohibition of Discrimination against Trans Persons
Manon Beury
4. Abolitionist Human Rights: Queering LGBT Human Rights Advocacy
and Law Karen Engle PART 2: (Re)Queering Human Rights Law: New and
Alternative Directions
5. Nothing was changing: Queering the Role of
International Law in the Global Campaign against Conversion Practices Daryl
WJ Yang
6. Childhood as a Site of Struggle: A Queer Perspective on
International Human Rights Law Concerning the Child-Protective Rationale and
School Education Warisa Ongsupankul
7. Sadomasochism at the European Court of
Human Rights: Rights to Sex and Drawing the Line Between Privacy and Public
Interest Alexandra G. Grolimund PART 3: Queer battlegrounds: Gender in
International Law
8. Human Rights Harmful and Harmless Gendered Outlaws
Giovanna Gilleri
9. Ideological Colonising: The Influence of Anti-Gender
Movements on Domestic and International Human Rights Law Sandra Duffy
10.
Fear of a Queer Law: Sex/Gender and the Exclusion of Queer Thinking in
International Law Juliana Santos de Carvalho PART 4: The Shifting Nature of
Queer Encounters with International Law: Journeys Towards Hope
11. The Art
of Living: LGBTQIA+ Activism and International Law Odette Mazel
12. Queer
Edens: Visions of Living with Human Rights Loveday Hodson
13. Epistemologies
Out of the Closet: Thinking Through Queer Theorys Intellectual Shifts in
International Law Edoardo Stoppioni
Tamsin Phillipa Paige is Senior Lecturer at Deakin Law School, Deakin University, Australia.

Claerwen OHara is Lecturer at La Trobe Law School, La Trobe University, Australia.