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  1. Are women human? And other international dialogues - by Catharine A. Mackinnon.Clare Chambers - 2007 - Ethics and International Affairs 21 (2):261–263.
    Catharine MacKinnon's fundamental claim is that the violence and abuse routinely inflicted on women by men is not treated with the same seriousness accorded to a human rights violation, or torture, or terrorism, or a war crime, or a crime against humanity, or an atrocity.
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  • Are Women Human?: and other international dialogues.Catharine A. MacKinnon - 1979 - Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
    More than half a century after the Universal Declaration of Human Rights defined what a human being is and is entitled to, Catharine MacKinnon asks: Are women human yet? She exposes the consequences and significance of the systematic maltreatment of women and its systemic condonation as she points toward fresh ways of targeting its toxic orthodoxies. A critique of the transnational status quo that also envisions the transforming possibilities of human rights, this bracing book makes us look as never before (...)
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  • Left Legalism/Left Critique.Wendy Brown & Janet Halley - 2002 - Duke University Press.
    DIVA reader aimed at revitalizing left legal and political critique./div.
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  • States of Injury: Power and Freedom in Late Modernity.Wendy Brown - 1995 - Princeton University Press.
    Whether in characterizing Catharine MacKinnon's theory of gender as itself pornographic or in identifying liberalism as unable to make good on its promises, Wendy Brown pursues a central question: how does a sense of woundedness become the basis for a sense of identity? Brown argues that efforts to outlaw hate speech and pornography powerfully legitimize the state: such apparently well-intentioned attempts harm victims further by portraying them as so helpless as to be in continuing need of governmental protection. "Whether one (...)
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  • (1 other version)Jurisprudence of jurisdiction.Shaun McVeigh (ed.) - 2006 - New York: Routledge-Cavendish.
    Questions of jurisdiction -- The metaphysics of jurisdiction -- On the founding of law's jurisdiction and the politics of sexual difference : the case of Roman law -- Guantanamo Bay, abandoned being and the constitution of jurisdiction -- Conjuring Palestine : the jurisdiction of dispossession -- Jurisdiction and nation-building : tall tales in nineteenth-century Aotearoa/New Zealand -- The suppression of state interests in international litigation -- Mapping territories -- Placing jurisdiction -- A jurisdiction of body and desire : exploring the (...)
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  • The end of human rights: critical legal thought at the turn of the century.Costas Douzinas - 2000 - Portland, Or.: Hart.
    Human rights have become an important ideal in current times, yet our age has witnessed more violations of human rights than any previous less enlightened one. This book explores the historical and theoretical dimensions of this paradox. Divided into two parts, the first section offers an alternative history of natural law, in which natural rights are represented as the eternal human struggle to resist opression and to fight for a society in which people are no longer degraded or despised. At (...)
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  • Just So: "The Law Which Governs Australia in Australian Law".Shaunnagh Dorsett & Shaun Mcveigh - 2002 - Law and Critique 13 (3):289-309.
    This essay provides a gloss on the relationship between the common law and the ‘law of the land’. It does so by turning attention to the technologies and identifications that continue to give Australian jurisdiction its place. These relations repeat the long pattern of the common law ordering of colonisation. They also provide the governmental conditions of legal responsibility for settlement.
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  • Left Legalism/Left Critique.Wendy Brown & Janet Halley - 2004 - Science and Society 68 (2):252-255.
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