Gendering Public and Private International Law: Transversal Legal Histories of the State, Market, and the Family through Women's Private Property Rights

IF 1.2 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
AJIL Unbound Pub Date : 2024-01-15 DOI:10.1017/aju.2023.53
M. Mckenna, M. Arvidsson
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Abstract

This essay takes up Karen Knop's challenge to reconstruct the oft-made distinction between private and public law by engaging private international law (PrIL) as a “lost side of international law.”1 To do so we interrogate the changing fortunes (literally) of women's private property rights in the long nineteenth century—a period characterized by the divestment and reinstatement of gendered rights in national law—focusing on the Nordics, Europe more broadly, and the Colonial world. Following Knop and other feminist legal scholars, and by engaging with questions of what Mariana Valverde calls “scale,”2 we bring women's property rights in conversation with international law. In doing so, we point to sites of engagement where the politico-economic structures of international law are lived, negotiated, reconfigured, and made real.3 We use scale to frame and inform our analysis bringing attention to how the “small” (micro) economics and politics of everyday life, women's labor, and gendered legal concerns, underpin and are an intrinsic part of the “large-scale” structures of international law. “All scales shifts,” Mariana Valverde notes, meaning that such “processes . . . br[ing] certain phenomena into focus that had previously been blurred or pushed to the background.”4 Recovering matters of women's history and everyday life, which, as Knop has argued are often “hiding in plain sight,” with a focus on women's property rights, brings to the fore the critical relationship between family/household, market, and the state, and the fundamental role international law has played in implementing a specific economic vision through the organization of gendered power relations.
国际公法和私法的性别化:通过妇女的私有财产权看国家、市场和家庭的横向法律史
本文回应了凯伦-克诺普(Karen Knop)的挑战,即通过将国际私法(PrIL)作为 "国际法失落的一 面 "1 来重新构建私法与公法之间常有的区别。为此,我们以北欧、广义的欧洲和殖民地世界为重 点,探讨了在漫长的 19 世纪--这一时期的特点是国家法中性别权利的剥离和恢复--妇女私有财产 权命运的变化(字面意思)。继克诺普和其他女权主义法律学者之后,通过探讨玛丽安娜-巴尔韦德(Mariana Valverde)所称的 "规模 "问题,2 我们将妇女的财产权与国际法联系起来。在此过程中,我们指出了国际法的政治经济结构在其中生活、协商、重构并成为现实的参与场所。3 我们利用规模来构建和指导我们的分析,使人们注意到日常生活中的 "小"(微观)经济和政治、妇女的劳动以及性别化的法律问题是如何支撑国际法的 "大 "结构并成为其固有的组成部分的。玛丽安娜-巴尔韦德(Mariana Valverde)指出,"所有的尺度都在发生变化",这意味着 "这些过程......使某些现象成为焦点,而这些现象之前是模糊的或被推到背景中的。"4 正如克诺普(Knop)所认为的,妇女的历史和日常生活往往 "隐藏在众目睽睽之下",以妇女的财产权为重点,对妇女历史和日常生活的重现,使家庭/住户、市场和国家之间的重要关系以及国际法在通过组织性别化权力关系来实现特定经济愿景方面所发挥的根本性作用凸显出来。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
AJIL Unbound
AJIL Unbound Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
40
审稿时长
8 weeks
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