PART I
INTRODUCTION
1. Feminist Judgments in International Law: An Introduction Loveday Hodson and Troy Lavers
PART II
GENERAL INTERNATIONAL LAW
Permanent Court of International Justice
2. Bozkurt Case, aka the Lotus Case (France v Turkey): Ships that Go Bump in the Night Christine Chinkin, Gina Heathcote, Emily Jones and Henry JonesInternational Court of Justice
3. Reservations to the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide Kasey McCall-Smith, Rhona Smith and Ekaterina Yahyaoui Krivenko
4. The Lockerbie Case (Libyan Arab Jamahiriya v United States of America) Kathryn Greenman and Troy Lavers
5. Germany v Italy
Zoi Aliozi, Bérénice K. Schramm and Ekaterina Yahyaoui KrivenkoCourt of Justice of the European Union
6. Gómez-Limón Sánchez-Camacho v Instituto Nacional de la Seguridad Social (INSS) and others
Marta Carneiro, Kirsten Ketscher and Freya Semanda
PART III
HUMAN RIGHTS
European Court of Human Rights
7. Christine Goodwin v the United Kingdom
Sara Bengtson, Damian Gonzalez-Salzberg, Loveday Hodson and Paul Johnson
8. Leyla Sahin v Turkey
Amel Alghrani, Amal Ali and Jill Marshall
9. Burden v the United Kingdom
Nicola Barker
10. Opuz v Turkey
Shazia Choudhry and Jonathan Herring
11. A, B and C v Ireland
Helen Fenwick, Wendy Guns and Ben Warwick
12. Ruusunen v Finland
Merris Amos, Maribel Canto-Lopez and Nani Jansen ReventlowCommittee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women
13. Cecilia Kell v Canada
Lolita Buckner Inniss, Jessie Hohmann and Enzamaria Tramontana
PART IV
INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW
Special Court for Sierra Leone
14. AFRC Trial Judgment (Prosecutor v Brima, Kamara and Kanu) Olga Jurasz, Sheri Labenski, Solange Mouthaan and Dawn SedmanInternational Criminal Court
15. The Prosecutor v Thomas Lubanga Dyilo
Yassin M Brunger, Emma Irving and Diana SankeyInternational Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
16. Prosecutor v Radovan Karadžic
Celestine Greenwood
PART V
CONCLUSION
17. Prefiguring Feminist Judgment in International Law Hilary Charlesworth