1.Introduction&Sari Kouvo and Zoe Pearson 1
PART ONE: FEMINIST THEORY AND METHOD IN INTERNATIONAL LAW 13
Navigating Feminisms: At the Margins, in the Mainstreams or Elsewhere? Reflections on Charlesworth, Otomo and Pearson&Vanessa Munro 13
2.Talking to Ourselves? Feminist Scholarship in International Law&Yoryko Otomo 17
3.Searching for Virtue in International Law&Zoe Pearson 33
4.Feminist Project(s): The Spaces of International Law 47
PART TWO: FEMINIST PERSPECTIVES ON NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL SECURITY 71
Three Feminist Critiques of Varying Feminist Capitulations to Crisis-Hegemony.Reflections on Otto, Mertus and Grahn-Farley&Anna Grear 71
5.Remapping Crisis through a Feminist Lens&Doanne Otto 75
6.Road Blocks, Blind Spots, Speed Bumps: A Feminist Look at the Post-9/11 Landscape for NGOs&Julie Mertus 97
7.The Politics of Inevitability: An Examination of Janet Halley's Critique of the Criminalisation of Rape as Torture&Maria Grahn-Farley 109
PART THREE: FEMINIST PERSPECTIVES ON GLOBAL AND LOCAL JUSTICE 133
From the Margins to the Mainstream and Back Again:Problems and Paradoxes of Feminist Engagement in Global and Local Justice. Reflections on Nesiah, Kouvo, Andersson, and Thomas 133
8.Missionary Zeal for a Secular Mission: Bringing Gender to Transitional Justice and Redemption to Feminism&Vasuki Nseiah 137
9.Taking Women Seriously? Conflict, State-building and Gender in Afghanistan 159
10.Trafficking in Human Beings: Vulnerability,Criminal Law and Human RightsUlika Andersson 177
11.Women Workers Take Over Power at the Margins: Economic Resistance, Political Compliance&Dania Thomas 193
12.Concluding (or Beginning?) Thoughts:Postcards to the Future&Sari Kouvo and Zoe Pearson 213
Index 221