The Law’s Gender: Entanglements and Recursions — Three Stories from Sri Lanka

Our essay examines the recursions, rationalities, limits, and promise of the law drawing on three recent cases of women who encountered law enforcement authorities and the courts in Sri Lanka. It provides a strong account of how dominant gender norms are mobilized to determine who is afforded the sa...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Neloufer de Mel, Dinesha Samararatne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Graduate Centre for the Study of Culture 2017-07-01
Series:On_Culture
Subjects:
law
Online Access:https://www.on-culture.org/journal/issue-3/de-mel-samararatne-laws-gender/
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spelling doaj-f4607f9f03af4a1bb59977c07548015f2020-11-24T21:43:51ZengInternational Graduate Centre for the Study of CultureOn_Culture2366-41422017-07-013The Law’s Gender: Entanglements and Recursions — Three Stories from Sri LankaNeloufer de Mel0Dinesha Samararatne1University of Colombo, Sri LankaUniversity of Colombo, Sri LankaOur essay examines the recursions, rationalities, limits, and promise of the law drawing on three recent cases of women who encountered law enforcement authorities and the courts in Sri Lanka. It provides a strong account of how dominant gender norms are mobilized to determine who is afforded the sanctuary of the law and who is not. By foregrounding the troubled encounters of the women with the law the essay also demonstrates the ways in which the law, culture, and the state combine, pull apart, and recombine in a manner that draws attention to their own internal relations; and how procedures established to ensure legal objectivity and judicial impartiality often fold back on themselves, reflecting the pliancy of the law. The essay also foregrounds the conditions of possibility, including feminist legal methodologies, that enable women to (re)turn to the law despite its transgressions. In doing so it argues for seeing the law as multilayered and recursive, reflecting the thick and uneven conditions under which women access justice in Sri Lanka. In highlighting how these women challenge and bargain with the law, the essay also acknowledges their tenacity and endurance in what, ultimately, is an effort at demanding an improved and substantive justice.https://www.on-culture.org/journal/issue-3/de-mel-samararatne-laws-gender/courtsgender justicelawpolicesri lanka
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Neloufer de Mel
Dinesha Samararatne
spellingShingle Neloufer de Mel
Dinesha Samararatne
The Law’s Gender: Entanglements and Recursions — Three Stories from Sri Lanka
On_Culture
courts
gender justice
law
police
sri lanka
author_facet Neloufer de Mel
Dinesha Samararatne
author_sort Neloufer de Mel
title The Law’s Gender: Entanglements and Recursions — Three Stories from Sri Lanka
title_short The Law’s Gender: Entanglements and Recursions — Three Stories from Sri Lanka
title_full The Law’s Gender: Entanglements and Recursions — Three Stories from Sri Lanka
title_fullStr The Law’s Gender: Entanglements and Recursions — Three Stories from Sri Lanka
title_full_unstemmed The Law’s Gender: Entanglements and Recursions — Three Stories from Sri Lanka
title_sort law’s gender: entanglements and recursions — three stories from sri lanka
publisher International Graduate Centre for the Study of Culture
series On_Culture
issn 2366-4142
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Our essay examines the recursions, rationalities, limits, and promise of the law drawing on three recent cases of women who encountered law enforcement authorities and the courts in Sri Lanka. It provides a strong account of how dominant gender norms are mobilized to determine who is afforded the sanctuary of the law and who is not. By foregrounding the troubled encounters of the women with the law the essay also demonstrates the ways in which the law, culture, and the state combine, pull apart, and recombine in a manner that draws attention to their own internal relations; and how procedures established to ensure legal objectivity and judicial impartiality often fold back on themselves, reflecting the pliancy of the law. The essay also foregrounds the conditions of possibility, including feminist legal methodologies, that enable women to (re)turn to the law despite its transgressions. In doing so it argues for seeing the law as multilayered and recursive, reflecting the thick and uneven conditions under which women access justice in Sri Lanka. In highlighting how these women challenge and bargain with the law, the essay also acknowledges their tenacity and endurance in what, ultimately, is an effort at demanding an improved and substantive justice.
topic courts
gender justice
law
police
sri lanka
url https://www.on-culture.org/journal/issue-3/de-mel-samararatne-laws-gender/
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