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Queer Engagements with International Law: Times, Spaces, Imaginings

Edited by: Claerwen O'Hara, Tamsin Phillipa Paige

ISBN13: 9781032643229
Published: October 2024
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £135.00



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This book explores times, spaces, and imaginings relating to international law through the lens of queer theory.

For some time now, queer theorists and legal scholars who think with queer theory have asked, what happens when queer theory moves out of its home base of gender and sexuality? The chapters in this book begin to answer this question by applying insights from queer theory to a diverse array of international law topics, from travaux préparatoires and international judging to the environment, oceans and outer space. While some contributions maintain a focus on gender and sexual diversity, all are characterised by a shift away from questions about LGBTIQA+ people towards wider discussions about power, normality, difference and liberation in international law. Through these engagements, the book demonstrates how queer theory can provide insights into a range of international law issues by allowing us to ‘make strange’ the taken-for-granted and contributing to a broader practice of reading for difference rather than dominance. The book engages with contemporary challenges in international law, from the climate crisis to new military technologies, such as automated naval vessels. It also showcases the diversity of approaches to queering international law that are emerging, with some authors drawing attention to the violence of (neo-)colonial international law and others engaging in more utopian and reparative thinking.

This collection of queer theoretical engagements with international law will be invaluable to scholars of international law and international relations with an interest in critical approaches to these areas; as well as to researchers, activists and practitioners working in cultural, gender, queer, and/or postcolonial studies.

Subjects:
Public International Law
Contents:
1. Reaching Out Towards the Horizon: Queer Engagements with International Law Beyond Queer Theory’s Site of Origin
Claerwen O’Hara and Tamsin Phillipa Paige

PART 1: Queering New Spaces in International Law: The Environment, Oceans and Outer Space
2. Challenging International Environmental Law’s Heteronormativity and Anthropocentrism: Towards Queer Kinship
Emily Jones
3. Oceans versus Ghost Fleets
Gina Heathcote
4. On Straightening and Subversion: A Queer Feminist Exploration of International Space Law and Politics
Claerwen O’Hara and Cris van Eijk

PART 2: Queer Encounters with Temporality and Coloniality in International Law
5. International Law, Coloniality and the Temporal Otherwise
Vanja Hamzić
6. Rewriting Queer Markers of Identity: International Cultural Heritage Law, Criminalisation, and the Other
Lucas Lixinski
7. The Filipina in the Shadows of International Law: A Case Study of Philippine Court Decisions
Ruby Rosselle L. Tugade

PART 3: Queering International Law’s Imaginaries: Reflections on Legal Myths and Methods
8. Queering (Un)Certainty in International Criminal Law: Reflections on the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
Caitlin Biddolph
9. Uncloseting Travaux
Cris van Eijk
10. Queer Judging, Straight Up: The Queer Judge and Judicial Systems
Joanne Stagg

PART 4: Queering Ourselves: Experimenting with Genre in Legal Academia
11. Repairing (The) International Law (Conference): The Affordances of Theatre
Danish Sheikh