Skip to content
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
IntLawGrrls

IntLawGrrls

Feminist voices on international law, policy & practice

    • About
    • Submissions

International Migration Law

  • June 28, 2018

    Human Trafficking as a Gendered Phenomenon: CEDAW and a missing jigsaw piece – Part II

    Gema Fernandez & Keina Yoshida
  • June 28, 2018

    Human Trafficking as a Gendered Phenomenon – Part I

    Gema Fernandez & Keina Yoshida
  • June 17, 2018

    Women challenge sexism in U.S. and Canadian guest worker programs through bold and innovative NAFTA labor petitions

    Tequila J. Brooks
  • Nationwide Class Action in the U.S. Protects the Right to Seek Asylum
    April 3, 2018

    Nationwide Class Action in the U.S. Protects the Right to Seek Asylum

    Lindsay M. Harris
  • December 10, 2017

    The Crime of Aggression under International Criminal Law: Links with Refugee Law

    Jenny Poon
  • Write On! [Slavery Past, Present In & Future]
    November 13, 2017

    Write On! [Slavery Past, Present In & Future]

    Osazenoriuwa Ebose
  • Call for Papers:  Vulnerability, Protection, and Agency: An Interdisciplinary Conference on Migration
    October 27, 2017

    Call for Papers: Vulnerability, Protection, and Agency: An Interdisciplinary Conference on Migration

    Cecilia Marcela Bailliet
  • Lebanon and the Origins of International (Refugee) Law
    October 5, 2017

    Lebanon and the Origins of International (Refugee) Law

    Maja Janmyr
  • July 12, 2017

    U.S. Government Sued Over Illegally Turning Away Asylum Seekers

    Lindsay M. Harris
  • April 13, 2017

    SCOTUS should grant cert in Castro. Judicial review of Trump’s immigration detention regime depends on it

    Karen Hoffmann
Previous Page
1 2 3 4 … 8
Next Page

Archives

IHL.

ICL.

Law of the Sea.

Transitional Justice.

Women’s Rights.

Intl Trade Law. PIL.

Intl Environmental Law.

IntLawGrrls speaks to the relationships between intersectional feminism and international law, policy and practice. The blog gives scholars, lawyers, policymakers, leaders and activists a place to share feminist perspectives on international legal issues.

Create a website or blog at WordPress.com IntLawGrrls

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • IntLawGrrls
    • Join 2,033 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • IntLawGrrls
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar