ABSTRACT

Regulating the International Movement of Women interrogates the complex relationship between the state and the normative regulation of women who cross national borders.

part |57 pages

Vulnerability and citizenship

chapter |18 pages

Constructing vulnerabilities and managing risk

State responses to forced marriage

chapter |19 pages

Safe spaces for dykes in danger?

Refugee law's production of vulnerable lesbians

part |65 pages

Vulnerability and race

chapter |23 pages

Life on the margins

A feminist counter-topography of H-2B workers

chapter |21 pages

Crossing borders, inhabiting spaces

The (in)credibility of sexual violence in asylum appeals

part |60 pages

Vulnerability and sex trafficking