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  1. Beyond ‘Revenge Porn’: The Continuum of Image-Based Sexual Abuse.Clare McGlynn, Erika Rackley & Ruth Houghton - 2017 - Feminist Legal Studies 25 (1):25-46.
    In the last few years, many countries have introduced laws combating the phenomenon colloquially known as ‘revenge porn’. While new laws criminalising this practice represent a positive step forwards, the legislative response has been piecemeal and typically focuses only on the practices of vengeful ex-partners. Drawing on Liz Kelly’s pioneering work, we suggest that ‘revenge porn’ should be understood as just one form of a range of gendered, sexualised forms of abuse which have common characteristics, forming what we are conceptualising (...)
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  • Wounded Attachments.Wendy Brown - 1993 - Political Theory 21 (3):390-410.
    If something is to stay in the memory, it must be burned in: only that which never ceases to hurt stays in the memory. Friedrich Nietzsche ( from On the Genealogy of Morals).
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  • Twenty Years of Feminist Legal Studies: Reflections and Future Directions.Sarah Lamble - 2014 - Feminist Legal Studies 22 (2):109-130.
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  • When We Have Never Been Human, What Is to Be Done?Nicholas Gane - 2006 - Theory, Culture and Society 23 (7-8):135-158.
    This interview reconsiders Donna Haraway’s Cyborg Manifesto 21 years after it was first published. It asks what has become of the three boundary breakdowns around which the Manifesto was structured - those between animals and humans, animal-humans (organisms) and machines, and the ‘physical and non-physical’. Against this backdrop, this interview examines the connection between the Cyborg Manifesto and Haraway’s more recent writings on companion species, along with what it means to read or write a ‘manifesto’ today. Recent notions of the (...)
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  • Catherine Turner: Violence, Law and the Impossibility of Transitional Justice: Routledge, Transitional Justice Series, Oxford, UK, 2016, 194 pp, hardcover , ISBN: 978-1-138-90756-0.James Gallen - 2017 - Feminist Legal Studies 25 (1):131-135.
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  • Internationalism and Commitment at the Kitchen Table.Ruth Fletcher, Julie McCandless, Yvette Russell & Dania Thomas - 2016 - Feminist Legal Studies 24 (1):1-6.
    The contributors to this issue focus on legal internationalism, including hybrid mixes with nationalist forms. They have provoked us as editors to think more about these sites and forms of engagement. Sankey shows how civic participation in the ECCC has played a key role in surfacing the gendered harms of separation and starvation. Turan highlights the problems with ICC exclusion of the experience of men and boys from sexual violence. Peroni expresses her hesitations over the Istanbul Convention given an association (...)
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  • FLaK: Mixing Feminism, Legality and Knowledge.Ruth Fletcher - 2015 - Feminist Legal Studies 23 (3):241-252.
    This editorial explains the themes of the forthcoming FLaK seminar and how those themes draw on the collective and individual contributions of the articles, interviews and commentaries presented in this issue. At FLaK, we propose to think with others about the kind of ‘kitchen table’ that FLS might provide into the future. How might feminist legal studies—the approach and the journal—best use its food, equipment, techniques, time, space, mood, energy and commitment? How shall FLS scholars and associates make the most (...)
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  • The Transitional Justice Gap: Exploring ‘Everyday’ Gendered Harms and Customary Justice in South Kivu, DR Congo.Holly Dunn - 2017 - Feminist Legal Studies 25 (1):71-97.
    Feminist transitional justice has greatly contributed to the study of justice in the ruins of war, notably around prosecuting wartime rape. At the same time, scholars have observed limitations to this research agenda such as externally-driven definitions gendered harms and how to address them. This paper explores two novel areas for feminist TJ research: ‘everyday gendered harms’ and customary justice. Based on a three month field study of baraza, a customary justice mechanism in parts of South Kivu, Democratic Republic of (...)
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  • The Law Becomes Us: Rediscovering Judgment: Hunter, McGlynn and Rackley : Feminist Judgments: From Theory to Practice, Hart, ISBN: 9781849460538. [REVIEW]Margaret Davies - 2012 - Feminist Legal Studies 20 (2):167-181.
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  • Suhraiya Jivraj: The Religion of Law: Race, Citizenship and Children’s Belonging: Palgrave Macmillan Socio-Legal Studies, London, UK, 2016, 195 pp, £26.99 , ISBN: 978-1-137-57431-2.Jane Mair - 2017 - Feminist Legal Studies 25 (1):137-139.
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  • Docile Suffragettes? Resistance to Police Photography and the Possibility of Object–Subject Transformation.Linda Mulcahy - 2015 - Feminist Legal Studies 23 (1):79-99.
    This paper provides a revisionist account of the authority and power of the criminal mugshot. Dominant theories in the field have tended to focus on the ways in which mugshots have been used as a way of disciplining criminal bodies and rendering them docile. It is argued here that additional emphasis could usefully be placed on stories of resistance in which the monological production site of the prison or police station transforms into a dialogical site, in which the objects of (...)
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  • On Being Uncomfortable.Ruth Fletcher, Julie McCandless, Yvette Russell & Dania Thomas - 2016 - Feminist Legal Studies 24 (2):121-126.
    Since the last issue of Feminist Legal Studies, we editorial board members have had lots of conversations about comfort, displacement and alienation. As we developed the programme for #FLaK2016 we thought about it as a kind of pulling ourselves out of our comfort zone, if academic events and journals ever have a comfort zone. Drawing on a mix of feminist live performance methods and a science and technology studies-type curiosity for objects of experimentation, we tried out a kitchen table method (...)
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  • Bringing the state up conceptually: Forging a body politics through anti-gay Christian refusal.Davina Cooper - 2015 - Feminist Theory 16 (1):87-107.
    If how the state is imagined shapes social and political action, the politics of state imagining provides an important site for progressive reflection. Arguing that conceptual approaches which support critique may not necessarily prove the best frameworks for supporting change, this article takes a left poststructuralist conception as its starting point to explore the place of conflicting interests, beliefs and affect in the make-up of the state and in shaping its enactment within civil society. Seeking to re-imagine state form in (...)
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  • Book Review: Revolution at Point Zero—housework, Reproduction and Feminist Struggle. [REVIEW]Emma Dowling - 2014 - Feminist Review 106 (1):e1-e2.
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  • Women Asylum Seekers in the Current Crisis: A Conversation.Harriet Samuels - 2017 - Feminist Legal Studies 25 (1):99-122.
    To mark International Women’s Day the Research Group for Law, Gender and Sexuality at Westminster Law School held an evening conversation on 10 March 2016 on Women and Asylum. Speakers working in different areas of the asylum system shared their insights and experiences with an audience of staff, students, activists and other visitors. Harriet Samuels chaired the conversation and the speakers were Princess Chine Onyeukwu, Debora Singer, Priya Solanki and Zoe Harper. This article is an edited extract from the transcript (...)
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  • Plagiarism, Kinship and Slavery.Mario Biagioli - 2014 - Theory, Culture and Society 31 (2-3):65-91.
    In conversation with Marilyn Strathern’s work on kinship and especially on metaphors of intellectual and reproductive creativity, this paper provides an analysis of plagiarism not as a violation of intellectual property but of the kinship relationships between author, work, and readers. It also analyzes the role of figures of kidnapped slaves and children in the genealogy of the modern concept of plagiarism.
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  • Responding to Submissions and Introducing Issue 23.Ruth Fletcher - 2015 - Feminist Legal Studies 23 (1):1-6.
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  • The Feminist Citizen-Subject: It’s not About Choice, It’s About Changing It All.Alexander Kondakov - 2017 - Feminist Legal Studies 25 (1):47-69.
    This article ties together two different sources related to the Trial of Pussy Riot in Russia in 2012. On the one hand, I consider legal documents, such as court proceedings, police reports, and the sentence. On the other, I analyse a life-history interview with one of the accused, thus giving her a voice that is not mediated by juridical institutions within criminal law procedure. This allows an analysis of two different subject positions produced by these texts: a conformist citizen and (...)
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  • The Role of Law in Temporal Reasoning: An Interview with Annelise Riles.Lucy Welsh - 2017 - Feminist Legal Studies 25 (1):123-129.
    On 17 May 2016 Lucy Welsh interviewed Annelise Riles about her work on the relationship between law and time as part of Welsh’s involvement with the AHRC Regulating Time network. Annelise Riles is the Jack G. Clarke Professor of Law in Far East Legal Studies and Professor of Anthropology at Cornell, and is Director of the Clarke Program in East Asian Law and Culture. Her work examines the transnational dimensions of laws, markets and culture across the fields of comparative law, (...)
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  • Introduction the Wherewithal of Feminist Methods.Carrie Hamilton & Yasmin Gunaratnam - 2017 - Feminist Review 115 (1):1-12.
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