RT @OUPLaw: "A critical history can contribute to our understanding of how international law as a profession was constructed in the Netherl…
RT @OUPLaw: "A critical history can contribute to our understanding of how international law as a profession was constructed in the Netherl…
RT @OUPLaw: "A critical history can contribute to our understanding of how international law as a profession was constructed in the Netherl…
RT @OUPLaw: "A critical history can contribute to our understanding of how international law as a profession was constructed in the Netherl…
"A critical history can contribute to our understanding of how international law as a profession was constructed in the Netherlands and beyond during the interwar period, and how race and gender were deeply entrenched in this construction." 🔓 Read more: h
@BrianneLeyh @AliFischer5 @jessicadorsey @UURechten Alison, this is the paper i mentioned by @JanneNijman https://t.co/v1FTRIXYuq
She references the great work of @JanneNijman looking at the ‘marked absences’ re women in #internationallaw https://t.co/v1FTRIXYuq
Marked #Absences: Locating #Gender and #Race in #InternationalLegalHistory - Janne E Nijman - #European Journal of #InternationalLaw, Volume 31, Issue 3, August 2020, Pages 1025–1050, OPEN ACCESS #thewomanquestion #thecolonialquestion #Dutchcolonialism ht
RT @OUPLaw: "Marked Absences: Locating Gender and Race in International Legal History" by @JanneNijman: https://t.co/EQRVfTN2W6 Free to re…
"Marked Absences: Locating Gender and Race in International Legal History" by @JanneNijman: https://t.co/EQRVfTN2W6 Free to read as part of the History of International Law collection: https://t.co/amk6XacBeT https://t.co/iUXmbsHM2M
@LRoordaLaw Ok here is ur homework: https://t.co/mTGAIS8DAu
Professor @JanneNijman on #gender and #race in international #LegalHistory.
New Advance Article in the EJIL 31:3 'Marked Absences: Locating Gender and Race in International Legal History’ by @JanneNijman https://t.co/4QWYNuieAr https://t.co/ZYoXDyYHCc