Can Transdisciplinarity Offer a Fair Addition in the Modern Protection of Women’s Rights?
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Abstract
The current level of internationalisation of all components of society has
begun to reveal the need for reforms and even a way of reorganising law, especially
international law, which is considered too inter-state to cope with the
regulatory needs of all actors in these legal relationships. Women’s rights are
directly or interdependently related, without exception, to every characteristic
of society, because the life and evolution of norms, as in the case of many other
social processes, are complex combinations of normative, instrumental and
other constraints and causes of action. From isolated to universal, international
law can mark feminism and its global manifestation more and more visibly,
which can lead to a universal, universally accepted protection.
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