Episode 32: No Country for Women: Lawyering for Gender Justice in Afghanistan

Episode 32: No Country for Women: Lawyering for Gender Justice in Afghanistan

Since returning to power in 2021, the Taliban has sought to reverse Afghan women’s hard-won progress toward gender equality. Through dozens of decrees, policies, and statements, it has targeted the autonomy and rights of women and girls, barring them from public life and severely restricting their basic freedoms. Yet, Afghan women have refused to accept their political, social, and economic erasure. Both inside the country and within the Afghan diaspora, they have protested the Taliban’s edicts in domestic and international fora, often at great personal peril.

In this episode of the EJIL Podcast, Afghan activist, researcher, and filmmaker Sahar Fetrat and University of Michigan Law Professor Karima Bennoune join hosts Neha Jain (Northwestern University) and Michal Saliternik (Netanya Academic College) to discuss Afghan Women’s fight for justice and accountability on the global stage. The conversation highlights the potential and limitations of various international legal processes, mechanisms, and strategies—including current and anticipated proceedings against the Taliban at the International Court of Justice and the International Criminal Court—for reclaiming Afghan women’s rights. It also explores ways to strengthen international action against gender persecution and gender apartheid in Afghanistan and beyond.

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Episoder(44)

Episode 43: Sudan—Does international law have anything to say?

Episode 43: Sudan—Does international law have anything to say?

The situation in Sudan is often described as the world's worst humanitarian crisis. Going by the numbers, it could well be more than 150,000 people have died. More than 12 million people have been dis...

23 Apr 52min

Episode 42: Russia, Imperial Continuities and Histories of International Law

Episode 42: Russia, Imperial Continuities and Histories of International Law

One feature of the turn to history in international law has been the adoption of ‘national’ traditions (here using ‘national’ very loosely) as a lens through which to explore a broader picture. This f...

7 Apr 49min

Episode 41: Reading Recommendations

Episode 41: Reading Recommendations

Panelists Michelle Ratton Sanchez and Nicolás M. Perrone share reading recommendations on some of the themes in Ep 41: Thinking through Rupture in International Economic Law: Views from Latin America

3 Mar 4min

Episode 41: Thinking through Rupture in International Economic Law: Views from Latin America

Episode 41: Thinking through Rupture in International Economic Law: Views from Latin America

In January 2026, the Prime Minister of Canada Mark Carney gave a widely noted speech at the World Economic Forum, in which he described the current period we're living through as a rupture in the worl...

3 Mar 50min

Episode 40: Palestinian Legal Frontiers: SC Res 2803 and beyond

Episode 40: Palestinian Legal Frontiers: SC Res 2803 and beyond

Palestine and the Palestinians are often the subjects of conversations in the news, on blogs and in judicial opinions, but not present in conversations themselves. The issues are treated episodically ...

23 Des 202556min

Episode 39: Holding the Line

Episode 39: Holding the Line

In this episode, Philippa Webb and Marko Milanovic are joined by Nicolas Angelet and Oona Hathaway to discuss the legality of the US strikes against suspected drug boats in the Caribbean and the addit...

14 Nov 202546min

Episode 38: Non-intervention— past, present and future

Episode 38: Non-intervention— past, present and future

Nehal Bhuta & Megan DonaldsonWe see today flagrant breaches of the prohibitions on the threat or use of force, but also renewed pressure and scrutiny on a related but broader prohibition, the prohibit...

16 Okt 202550min

Episode 37: The ICJ’s Advisory Opinion on Climate Obligations: Remarkable, Radical and Robust

Episode 37: The ICJ’s Advisory Opinion on Climate Obligations: Remarkable, Radical and Robust

There were gasps in the courtroom when the ICJ delivered its advisory opinion on the obligations of States in respect of climate change on 23 July 2025. In this episode, Margaret Young (Melbourne Law ...

30 Jul 202551min

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