Work On! 2021 Summer Program in International Criminal Law & International Legal Approaches to Terrorism

Work On! is an occasional item about workshops, roundtables, and other fora that do not necessarily include publication:

American University Washington College of Law has opened registration for their 2021 Summer Program. The theme of the program is International Criminal Law and International Legal Approaches to Terrorism (The Hague Program). The program will run from June 1-25, 2021, followed by a reading period and exams. This year, the program will be held in a virtual format, allowing students to attend from around the world. This unique program provides an intensive and dynamic course of study in international criminal law and counterterrorism, while also providing students opportunities to meet and network with practitioners and experts working on the front lines of accountability for international crimes. The program may be taken for credit or a non-credit certificate (special certificate rates apply for NGO practitioners, academics, and government staff). For more information, click here.

Write On! The Journal of Gender, Social Policy & the Law

The Journal of Gender, Social Policy, & the Law is currently accepting article submissions for publication in their upcoming issues. The latest Washington and Lee Law Review rankings list the American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy, & the Law as one of the top-cited legal periodicals in the U.S. and selected non-U.S. regions in the subject area of Social Policy, Gender, Sexuality and the Law. 

You can submit your article for consideration by email to [email protected], or through Scholastica. The Journal accepts submissions on a wide variety of topics and subjects within the legal field. They are interested in topics about disability law, racial justice and the law, constitutional issues, gender-based legal issues, health law, LGBTQIA+ issues within the legal system, and other related topics. To see our past publications, please visit http://www.jgspl.org/ and Westlaw for a complete list. 

However, please note that articles written by law students will not be accepted. Articles that present new legal arguments or perspectives about timely legal issues relating to U.S. laws directly or comparatively will be preferred. There should also be substantial legal analysis throughout the piece. Articles with a word limit of 15,000 words more or less, including at least 150 footnotes will be preferred. Generally, articles are evaluated depending on many factors such as the strength of the argument, novelty, complexity, policy considerations, and whether the overall topic(s) falls within the Journal’s subject area.

Recap: Transnational Legal Feminism – Beyond Western Hegemonies of International Law and Feminist Theories

By Aishwarya Chaturvedi

Cornell Law School and London South Bank University organized global conference entitled “Transnational Legal Feminism — Beyond Western Hegemonies of International Law and Feminist Theory” on March 26, 2021.  Speakers and attendees hailed from almost every continent in the world. The theme of the conference was understanding the legacies and ramifications of the domination of western thought on feminist research and practice in the sphere of international law and feminist legal theory. 

The conference commenced with opening remarks (which can be found here) from the conference co-organizers, Ms. Farnush Ghadery, Law School, London South Bank University and Professor Sital Kalantry, Cornell Law School.  Professor Farnush explained that the theory of transnational law and feminism was a methodology for building cross border transnational feminism and not hegemony of western epistemologies. Professor Kalantry further elaborated on the concept of transnational legal feminism draws from two bodies of literature: gender studies and law scholarship. In the introductory remarks, the co-organizers pointed out that transnational legal feminism much like transnational law “de-emphasizes” the nation and recognizes that laws in one country also impact people in other countries. However, the laws need to be considered with reference to a specific context. Professor Sital expressed that for her, transnational legal feminism was different from postcolonial feminism because it focuses on “prescriptive solutions.”  

Professor Chandra Mohanty, Dean’s Professor of the Humanities, Women’s and Gender Studies, Syracuse University, presented a keynote for the conference entitled “Transnational Feminism as Insurgent Praxis.” Professor Mohanty started her presentation by explaining the term “cartographies of struggle” which was coined by her three decades ago in her book ‘Third World Women and the Politics of Feminism.’ She explained that the concept of cartographies of struggle helps us understand how power works through inter-connected histories of racial capitalism and labour flows; colonial legacies of heteronormative nation states; and transnational advocacy for social and economic justice. She emphasized that the term “transnational” does not mean global or international or opposite of national; it means here and now in a local, specific and particular context. 

Professor Mohanty elaborated on this by saying that transnational feminism involves thinking historically, comparatively and relationally and it fundamentally involves addressing the cartographies of power difference. Interestingly, she also discussed feminist geographer Cindi Katz’s notion of a counter topography to understand transnational connections which influence routine experiences of people. She pertinently pointed out that Katz explained that “not all places affected by capital global ambition are affected in the same way and not all issues matter equally everywhere.”

Professor Mohanty went on to say that a somewhat acceptance of misogynistic racial capitalism in the last decade along with the neoliberal colonisation of language and public life has led to a “neoliberal fascism” which can be explained as a culture and governance structure that brings together the “worst excesses” of capitalism with authoritarian ideals. She said governments and powerful people utilize security, mass incarceration and mass deportation to impose their control and authority and normalize violence against black, brown and indigenous bodies.  

Professor Mohanty discussed that transnational feminist frameworks challenge the national and international space by introducing the question of colonial legacies and gendered racial globalities as central to policy making. She explained that insurgent feminism requires understanding that racialised gender is essential for mapping borders, histories and movements and understanding why and how women, queer and gender nonconforming people matter.  She concluded her address by suggesting that developing transnational feminism frameworks is fundamental to envisioning solidarities and building bridges across borders.

From a call for papers, law scholars from Singapore, Canada, India, and Thailand (among other countries) were selected to present papers, which will be published in a special issue of Transnational Law Journal. The following papers were presented at the conference:

  • “Feminist Perspectives on Transnational Comfort Women Litigation” by  Cheah W.L.
  • “Nationalised subject: Rape law reform and reaction in Thailand” by Suprawee Asanasak.
  • “Exploring the Borderlands/ La Frontera of Unpaid Labour: Towards a Feminist Mestiza in Transnational Labour Law” by  Miriam Bak McKenna and Maj Grasten.
  • “Istanbul Convention: Critique of the Honor Crime Provision” by Sital Kalantry presented and Shireen Moti. 
  • “Western Hosts and Southern Ghosts” by  Siobhan Yorgun.
  •  “The #MeToo movement’s manifestation in Croatia” by Josipa Šaric.
  • “Beyond International Human Rights Law Discourse – The Power of Music and Song in Contextualised Struggles for Gender Equality” by Ms. Farnush Ghadery.

Go On! 5th CELI Peace Talk Seminar: International Law & International Relations

Go On! makes note of interesting conferences, lectures, and similar events.

► The Centre for European Law and Internationalisation (CELI) announced open registration for the 5th CELI Peace Talk seminar on ‘International Law & International Relations: Power and Global Inequality’ which will be held on 22 April 22, 2021. For more information and registration, please click here.


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Go On! “Diversity in aid of legitimacy of international arbitration?”

Go On! makes note of interesting conferences, lectures, and similar events.

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The Albert Hirschman Centre on Democracy of the Graduate Institute, Geneva (IHEID) announced open registration for Diversity in aid of legitimacy of international arbitration?, which will be held on April 26, 2021 at 12:30 PM EST (6:30pm CEST).

The SNF-funded project “Diversity on the International Bench: Building Legitimacy for International Courts and Tribunals”, led by Professors Neus Torbisco-Casals and Andrew Clapham (Graduate Institute), has launched a monthly public lecture series on “Women’s Voices in the International Judiciary”. The series aims to reflect on the lack of diversity in the international judiciary —especially gender diversity—, which raises concerns not just in terms of descriptive representation and symbolic self-identification, but also regarding unconscious bias and systemic privileging of specific ideologies or positions in the process of adjudication.

The lectures will run from March 2021 until Spring 2022. The third lecture will feature Professor Gabrielle Kaufmann-Kohler, who will deliver a presentation titled “Diversity in aid of legitimacy of international arbitration?”.

The lectures are open to the broader public, but registration is required for attendance. Registration is available here. For more information on our project and events, click here.

Go On! Nuremberg Academy Event

Go On! makes note of interesting conferences, lectures, and similar events.

International Nuremberg Principles Academy: International Nuremberg  Principles Academy

►  The International Nuremberg Principles Academy and the Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg announced open registration for the upcoming conference entitled, Prohibition, Prosecution and Prevention of Enforced Disappearances, which will be held on online on May 7-8, 2021. The conference will consist of a series of sessions in Zoom webinar format to bring together communities virtually to explore possible responses to enforced disappearances.

►  Please register by sending an e-mail with your name, institutional affiliation and e-mail address to [email protected] with the subject line “Registration for Conference”. Click here for more details.

Go on! ABILA International Law Weekend: Call for Panel Proposals

Go On! makes note of interesting conferences, lectures, and similar events.

ABILA - American Branch of the International Law Association

► The American Branch of the International Law Association (ABILA) is now receiving panel proposals for its annual International Law Weekend (ILW), to be held October 28-30, 2021. The deadline to submit a proposal is May 30, 2021.

► The ILW Organizing Committee (Committee) invites panel proposals to be submitted online by May 30, 2021. Please note that proposals will only be accepted through the online ILW Panel Proposal Submission Form. For questions regarding ILW 2021, please contact: [email protected]. For more information, please click here.

Write On! Call for Papers 6th Annual TAU Workshop for Junior Scholars in Law

Tel Aviv University - Find Your LL.M.

This installment of Write On!, our periodic compilation of calls for papers, includes calls to present at the Annual TAU Workshop, as follows:


► The Tel Aviv University (TAU) Buchmann Faculty of Law is pleased to invite submissions to its sixth junior legal scholar workshop., to be held November 14-16, 2021, at at the TAU Faculty of Law. The theme is “Legal Change in Revolutionary Times.” Deadline is June 1st ,2021.


► The workshop provides junior scholars with the opportunity to present and discuss their work, receive meaningful feedback from faculty members and peers, and actively participate in an international community of junior legal scholars.  For more information on the workshop and details of the call for papers, click here.

On the Job! Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice Officer (Firearms Control Expert)

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime is seeking a firearms control expert (P3).

This position is located in the Implementation Support Section (ISS) of the Organized Crime and Illicit Trafficking Branch (OCB), Division for Treaty Affairs (DTA) of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) in Vienna. The incumbent will work under the direct supervision of the Senior Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice Officer, heading the Global Firearms Programme (GFP).

The deadline for this position is May 6, 2021. For more information, click here.