Book launch of Victims and the Labour of Justice at the International Criminal Court: The Blame Cascade (OUP, 2024) with Dr Leila Ullrich (author) and Prof. Christine Schwöbel-Patel (discussant).

Event date
23 May 2024
Event time
15:30 - 17:00
Oxford week
TT 5
Audience
Anyone
Venue
Wharton Room - All Souls College (and online)
Speaker(s)

Christine Schwöbel-Patel, Warwick Law School

Notes & Changes

Please note that this event will be recorded, if you do not wish to be part of the recording, please feel free to turn your cameras off once the talk begins. The talk will be made available on the Criminology website and YouTube channel at a later date. 

 

Registration closes at midday on Wednesday 22nd May. The Teams link will be sent to you that afternoon.

Abstract:

Victims and the Labour of Justice at the International Criminal Court

Victim participation at the ICC has routinely been viewed as an empty promise of justice or mere spectacle for audiences in the Global North, providing little benefit for victims. Why, then, do people in Kenya and Uganda engage in justice processes that offer so little, so late? How and why do they become the court's victims and intermediaries, and what impact do these labels have on them?

Victims and the Labour of Justice at the International Criminal Court offers a response to these poignant questions, demonstrating that the notion of 'justice for victims' is not merely symbolic, expressive, or instrumental. On the contrary — the book argues — the ICC's methods of victim engagement are productive, reproducing the Court as a relevant institution and transforming victims in the Global South into highly gendered and racialized labouring subjects. Challenging the Court's interplay with global capitalist relationships, the book makes visible the hidden labour of justice, and how it lures, disciplines, and blames both victims and victims' advocates.

Drawing on critical theory, criminological analysis, and multi-sited ethnographic fieldwork in The Hague, Kenya, and Uganda, Victims and the Labour of Justice at the International Criminal Court illuminates how the drive to include victims as participants in international criminal justice proceedings also creates and disciplines them as blameworthy capitalist subjects. Yet, as victim workers learn to 'stop crying', 'be peaceful', 'get married', 'work hard', and 'repay debt', they also begin to challenge the terms of global justice.

Here is the link to the Book Launch Site under the Publisher's Site: Oxford University Press

    

Biographies:

Leila Ullrich

Leila Ullrich is an Associate Professor of Criminology at the Faculty of Law, University of Oxford. She works at the crossroads of international criminal justice, transitional justice, victimology, and border criminology. She is particularly interested in how global criminal justice institutions create gendered and racialized subjects, and how these subjects (victims, refugees, and racialized communities) engage with and resist these processes. She approaches these questions using feminist, decolonial, and critical political economy theories while also developing new bottom-up research methods such as qualitative WhatsApp surveying. Leila was previously a Lecturer in Law at Queen Mary University of London and a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow at Oxford.

Christine Schwöbel-Patel

Professor Christine Schwöbel-Patel is co-Director of the Centre for Critical Legal Studies at Warwick Law School. She is the author of two monographs Marketing Global Justice (CUP 2021) and Global Constitutionalism in International Legal Perspective (Brill 2011) and editor of Critical Approaches to International Criminal Law: An Introduction (Routledge 2014). Christine’s current research projects focus on the themes of aesthetics and international justice, imperial rentier capitalism in the green transition, and trials of rupture. Rosa Luxemburg’s work and influence runs like a red line through her research and pedagogy. Christine has won two competitive stipendiary fellowships for her work on the international law of the green transition: An Alexander von Humboldt Fellowship for Experienced Researchers (2022-2023) and a Leverhulme Research Fellowship (2023-2024).

Found within

Criminology