TY - JOUR AU - Atanasio, Kate AB - AbstractThis review article critiques Frontiers of Gender Equality: Transnational Legal Perspectives, edited by Rebecca J Cook. Composed of chapters centred on advancing gender equality, Frontiers differs from the typical edited collection because the authors worked collaboratively and shared a common purpose. They are all strongly committed to substantive equality (as opposed to formal equality) and recognise the importance of addressing intersectional discrimination. In their respective chapters the authors expand the discourse surrounding gender equality law by envisioning transformative approaches to righting gendered wrongs in domestic, regional and international human rights systems. While the collection is certainly valuable for scholars and legal practitioners, this review article considers its value for a different audience – that of graduate students in law and gender studies. Because the book is far more structured and unified than the typical edited collection, it could serve as a foundational textbook for an advanced comparative course on gender equality and the law. This review article – authored by a professor and a law student – analyses the book’s considerable strengths as a textbook. However, it also identifies certain weaknesses and suggests supplementary materials, in order to provide better coverage of the Asia-Pacific region. TI - Scholarship with a Purpose: Frontiers of Gender Equality Pushes the Boundaries for Students and Scholars Alike JF - Asia-Pacific Journal on Human Rights and the Law DO - 10.1163/15718158-25030002 DA - 2024-11-29 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/brill/scholarship-with-a-purpose-frontiers-of-gender-equality-pushes-the-WYeSWU50l1 SP - 309 EP - 328 VL - 25 IS - 3 DP - DeepDyve ER -