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Berger International Speaker Series with Marissa Jackson Sow – Reckoning With the Racial Contract in International Law

November 8, 2022

12:15 pm

Please join us for a virtual seminar given by our guest Professor Marissa Jackson Sow of the University of Richmond School of Law and moderated by Cornell’s Professor Desirée LeClercq.

SEMINAR: Reckoning With the Racial Contract in International Law

DATE: Tuesday, November 8, 2022

TIME: 12:15 p.m. to 1:15 p.m. ET

Click this link to sign up for the Zoom Webinar: https://cornell.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_0kFc-HyiRISp6L-tpnTQfQ

The Seminar: Reckoning with the Racial Contract in International Law

Calls from scholars for anti-racist transformations within international law and international law scholarship and pedagogy have made the failure of international law to define, condemn, and combat racism increasingly ubiquitous, and to the human rights advocate, confounding. Despite the ongoing commemoration of the International Decade for People of African Descent and direct calls from UN member states for the United Nations to confront the issues of systemic racism and police brutality in liberal Western states, the United Nations has appeared to shy away from any measures beyond those which gently encourage States to aspire to eliminate racial discrimination. Moreover, despite international law’s formal guarantees of equality of access to justice and accountability for human rights violations, people of African descent and majority Black member states are systematically constructed out of international policymaking authority, and international legal protections—leaving them vulnerable to aggression, exploitation, and extraction.

Professor Jackson contends that the contemporary public international law regime, created and dominated by settler colonial states, has no ability to combat anti-Black racism because it has no intent or interest in dismantling racism; rather, the regime is both the manifestation of global racial contracting and the mechanism by which such contracting persists. The structure of the United Nations, along with the substance and procedure of international law, work together in coordinated fashion to guarantee that the racial contracts in force in racial states, are also performed, enforced, and protected within a global Racial Superstate.

About our Distinguished Guest: Professor Marissa Jackson Sow

Professor Jackson Sow is an Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Richmond School of Law. She teaches and writes in the areas of contracts, constitutional law, international law, human rights, and legal theory/jurisprudence. Her most recent work, Protect and Serve, was published in the California Law Review. Professor Jackson Sow earned her J.D. from Columbia Law School, her Master of Laws from the London School of Economics and Political Science, and her B.A. from Northwestern University. Immediately prior to returning to academia, Professor Jackson served as a Leadership in Government Fellow for the Open Society Foundations and a 2020 Fellow for the Fellowship Programme for People of African Descent hosted by the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.

Additional Information

Program

Institute for African Development