How many women judges are enough on international courts?
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/22999Dato
2021-02-21Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Føllesdal, AndreasSammendrag
The African Court of Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACtHPR) made history on August 27, 2018. The
majority of its judges were female—six of 11, and the first among international courts and tribunals
(ICs) to secure sex parity—that is, numerical equality.1
This achievement is even more remarkable
given that only 23% of the judges and arbitrators of the ICs are women.2
The milestone also prompts
us to consider more closely what considerations of legitimacy entail about the proportion of women
international judges.
The present composition of ICs is clearly under legal, social, and political control, and ICs have
profound effects. The persistent underrepresentation of women is especially striking since not only
civil society groups, but also the states who nominate and establish election procedures have agreed
several treaties that require or urge a balance of gender representation.3
So it would seem that the parity
achieved by the ACtHPR should be applauded. However, that IC may now be even more gender equal
than we may have reason to require of a legitimate IC—or so this article argues. A less egalitarian
composition within a “parity zone” of approximately 40% of either of the main sexes seems to suffice.
The present reflections considers various possible arguments offered concerning the impact of gender inequality on the international bench, drawing in part on studies of domestic judiciaries, as well as
on available research and reflections by practitioners and women international judges.4
Several arguments support calls to increase the proportion of female international judges—but how far? Section 2
addresses some background issues: first concerning the terms “feminism,” “sex,” and “gender,” then,
the tasks of ICs that should lead us to question the present sex inequality on the international bench.
Forlag
WileySitering
Føllesdal. How many women judges are enough on international courts?. Journal of Social Philosophy. 2021:1-23Metadata
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