04/17/2026
What role can international law play in confronting the racialised effects of rising fascism?
Join the Institute for Global Law and Policy for the Virtual Launch of "Emancipating International Law: Confronting the Violence of Racialized Boundaries" (OUP 2026), edited by Mohsen al Attar and Claire Smith.
Tuesday, 28 April | 9:00 AM EST / 2:00 PM GMT | Zoom
Registration: https://tinyurl.com/Zoom-IGLP
The global resurgence of fascist narratives has been propelled by the persistence of racist ideologies and practices. Paralleling historic moments of crisis, power today is being consolidated through racialised violence and subordination. This has manifested through the mainstreaming of racist discourse; the dispensability of non-white life in war and genocide; hostile policies towards migrants and refugees; and the suppression of racial justice initiatives across civil society and academic spaces. The fault-lines in international law, including the racial dynamics embedded in its doctrines, have become increasingly apparent, raising questions about the framework’s silence and complicity in the face of evolving racial injustice(s).
Is there a role for international law in confronting the racialised effects of fascism? How have international legal scholars responded? To answer these questions, we invite you to the Virtual Launch of "Emancipating International Law: Confronting the Violence of Racialised Boundaries" (OUP, 2026), a collection of chapters that explores the dynamic relationship between race, racism, and international law. Contributors speak to the racialised features that permeate the international law project, and structures central to international law, with a view to interrogating both its potential and its limitations in addressing today’s — and tomorrow’s — challenges.