CentreLGS, Liberty, LAG Conference. Encountering Human Rights: Gender/Sexuality, Activism and the Promise of Law CentreLGS: AHRC Research Centre for Law, Gender and Sexuality Liberty LAG - Legal Action Group Encountering Human Rights: Gender/Sexuality , Activism and the Promise of Law 5 - 6 January 2007, University of  Westminster, London

With thanks to the following funders:

The Modern Law Review

Kent Law School
Kent Law School

News...

Plenary Speakers:

Justice Yvonne Mokgoro

Zillah Eisenstein

Pragna Patel

Gwen Brodsky and Shelagh Day

 

see the plenary speakers page for more information.

 

 

The report is now available from the Centre's joint conference in January
2007 with Liberty and LAG entitled 'Encountering Human Rights:
Gender/Sexuality, Activism and the Promise of Law'
. We have also produced a special issue of the journal Feminist Legal Studies including some of the papers that participants gave at the conference.

To access the report please click here.

To access the special issue of Feminist Legal Studies (only available to subscribers) please click here.

Encountering Human Rights: Gender/Sexuality, Activism and the Promise of Law

Many thanks to all the speakers and participants at the Encountering Human Rights conference, for making this such an engaging event. The final version of the programme can be downloaded below, and the conference report will be available on this website soon.

Final Conference Programme

What we did:

This two-day conference brought together activists, academics and practitioners to assess how human rights law and practice in the UK interacts with issues concerning gender and sexuality. The conference was organised by the Centre for Law, Gender and Sexuality, Liberty and the Legal Action Group. It has been funded by the Modern Law Review.

Some of the central questions that the conference asked included:

How we did it:

The aim of the conference was to establish a meaningful dialogue across activism, academia and legal practice. We drew plenary speakers from a range of occupational backgrounds. Each conference panel combined speakers from activism and academia, with the aim of breaking the traditional "conference" mould.

The conference combined an analytical attitude to rights litigation with an open, and collaborative attempt to think creatively about how to use human rights arguments to achieve substantive goals. We:

When?

5 and 6 January 2007.

Where?

The University of Westminster, London.

Please Note: CPD Points are available at this event!