Abstract
Introduction: Women's Lives, Human Rights by Debra Bergoffen, Paula Ruth Gilbert, and Tamara Harvey Part I: Complicating the Discourses of Victimhood 1. Women and the Genocidal Rape of Women: The Gender Dynamics of Gendered War Crimes by Laura Sjoberg 2. Human Trafficking: Why is it Such and Important Women's Issue? by Louise Shelley 3. Transforming the Representable: Asian Women in Anti-Trafficking Discourse by Donna Kay Maeda 4. Sin, Salvation, or Starvation? The Problematic Role of Religious Morality in U.S. Anti-Sex Trafficking Policy by Lucinda Peach Part II: Interrogating Practices of Representation 5. How Not to Give Rape Political Significance by Louise Du Toit 6. Human Trafficking: A Photographic Essay by Kay Chrenush 7. Marjorie Agosin's Poetics of Memory: Human Rights, Feminism, and Literary Forms by Ricardo F. Vivancos Perez 8. Digital Storytelling for Gender Justice: Exploring the Challenges of Participation and the Limits of Polyvocality by Amy Hill Part III: Strategies of Engagement 9. 'Sweet Electrical Greetings': Women, HIV, and the Evolution of an Intervention Project in Papua New Guinea by Holly Wardlow, with Mary Tamia 10. Economic Empowerment of Women as a Global Project: Economic Rights in the Neo-Liberal Era by Nitza Berkovitch and Adriana Kemp 11. Algerian Women in Movement: Three Waves of Feminist Activism by Valentine M. Moghadam 12. Using Law and Education to Make Human Rights Real in Women's Real Lives by Nancy Chi Cantalupo Part IV: Crossing Legal Landscapes 13. Seduced by Information, Contaminated by Power: Women's Rights as a Global Panopticon by Saida Hodzic 14. Human Rights of Women and Girls with Disabilities in Developing Countries by Amy T. Wilson 15. Gender and Customary Mechanisms of Justice in Uganda by Joanna R. Quinn 16. Policing Bodies and Borders: Women, Prostitution, and the Differential Regulation of U.S. Immigration Policy by Deirdre Moloney 17. The Institutionalization of Domestic Violence Against Women in the United States by Julie Walters Part V: Confronting Global Gender Justice 18. Configuring Feminisms, Transforming Paradigms: Reflections from Kum-Kum Bhavnani, from an Interview with Kum-Kum Bhavnani by Connie L. McNeely
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