Devon W. Carbado is the Elihu Root Professor of Law at NYU School of Law and Distinguished Research Professor of Law at UCLA School of Law. He is the author of Unreasonable: Black Lives, PolicePower, and the Fourth Amendment (2022).Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw is Professor of Law at UCLA and at Columbia Law School, where she is also Founding Director the Center for Intersectionality and Social Policy Studies (CISPS). Justin Desautels-Stein is Visiting Professor at Duke Law School and Professor of Law at the University of Colorado Law School. He is the Founding Director of the University of Colorado's Center for Critical Thought, and the author of The Right to Exclude: A Critical Race Approach to Sovereignty, Borders, and International Law.Chantal Thomas is Professor of Law at Cornell Law School, where she also directs the Clarke Initiative for Law and Development in the Middle East and North Africa.
""This volume showcases an impressive array of scholars; and they have produced an unprecedented collection of essays that pose a serious challenge to the traditional conceptions of what constitutes legitimate scholarship in the field of international law. Their ideas are provocative and insightful. Not only do they advance a compelling discourse that theorizes and historicizes issues of race and racism, they also astutely advance discussions about racialized borders and concerns related to the materiality of race and rights. Simply put, it is a groundbreaking contribution."" —Luke Charles Harris, Vassar College ""This volume is significant and makes a notable contribution to the literature on international law and racism. In the wake of the Black Lives Matter movement in the United States and its resonance globally, a volume of this kind is of particular interest both in the USA and abroad. The editors and contributors are leaders in critical race theory or international law."" —Penelope Andrews, New York Law School ""This volume is long overdue in the field. International lawyers have been complacent about their ethnocentric critical attitude for too long. If there is a chance to salvage international law as a tool to resist the current sinister turns in global governance, colorblindness and the so-called 'perpetrator perspective' must be, as this book invites us to do, fought at all costs."" —Jean d'Aspremont, Sciences Po Law School and University of Manchester