Kirsten Campbell is a professor in sociology at Goldsmiths College, University of London. She has been a visiting scholar at Sciences Po, Lund University, and University of California, Berkeley. Her research on gender, international criminal law, and transitional justice has been published in numerous journals and books. A leading expert on conflict-related sexual violence, Campbell has worked with non-governmental organisations, the United Nations, and the United Kingdom and European Union on policy and practice in this area.
'Kirsten Campbell is an original, incisive voice in international criminal justice debates. In this compelling book, she argues that it is not enough to reform systems of justice – they need to be radically transformed.' Joanna Bourke, Birkbeck, University of London 'Kirsten Campbell brings her considerable expertise on feminist, and socio-legal theory to this definitive study of sexual violence prosecutions at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and the Women's Court. Richly informed by over two decades of ethnographic research, Campbell combines an insider's knowledge of international criminal law, a scholar's acute questioning of legal and social order, with an activist's commitment to building the feminist gender justice we need.' Doris Buss, Carleton University 'This book brilliantly delivers intellectual rigour, creative reforms, a theory of feminist justice, and recognition of the power of accountability – as broadly conceived – to promote global social emancipation.' Mark A. Drumbl, Washington and Lee University