A recording of a talk by Shahd Hammouri at the TNI symposium on ‘Revisiting the Past, Shaping the Future’ in Amsterdam on 14 October 2023.
Join us for a roundtable discussion on the impacts of Anti-Palestinian Racism and the modes of solidarity organizing in comparative settler colonial contexts.
Speakers: Michael Fabris, Nimmi Gowrinathan, Dania Majid, Adrian Smith, Lana Tatour
The panel will discuss the domestic and international legal frameworks of land dispossession, spatial control, occupation and ethnic cleansing in its historical and contemporary forms, providing essential analyses for understanding the current crisis.
Speakers: Suhad Bishara, Darryl Li, John Reynolds, Nimer Sultany
On 15 October 2023, over 800 scholars and practitioners of international law, conflict studies and genocide studies signed a public statement warning of the possibility of genocide being perpetrated by Israeli forces against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.
Mia Swart describes the pivotal role of Judge Trindade in bridging diverse jurisdictions by citing the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and the African Court of Human and People’s Rights at the International Court of Justice to foster a more comprehensive and unified approach to global human rights protection.
Godwin Eli Kwadzo Dzah delves into the historical roots of the ‘new’ human right to a clean, healthy, and sustainable environment in international law, highlighting Africa’s pioneering contributions and challenging the marginalisation of its role in the evolving global narrative.
Gervaise Savvias reflects on how critical understandings of race are side-lined in international criminal law by the prevailing influences of neo-colonialism, neo-imperialism, and capitalism. International criminal law simply reflects existing inequalities and cannot be expected to be a driving force for racial justice.
Shahd Hammouri examines the cyclical interrelations of micro-fascisms through the lens of a classroom discussion on war economies, and an iconic piece of Egyptian cinema.
Amar Bhatia interviews Beverly Jacobs, Jeffery G. Hewitt, and Sylvia McAdam (Saysewahum) about international law and the continuing system of Indigenous treaties, ceremonies and protocols that predate western colonial international law.
Vasuki Nesiah traces how the movement for the NIEO represented the formerly-colonized challenging the hierarchies of knowledge and governance that was embedded in the world’s economic and racial orderings.
