International Law

Too Close to Home? International Criminal Law, War Crimes and Family Violence

Citation:

Philips, Ruth B. 2001. “Too Close to Home? International Criminal Law, War Crimes and Family Violence.” Thomas Jefferson Law Review 24: 229-38.

Author: Ruth B. Philips

Abstract:

This essay is based on my March 2002 presentation at the Women and Law Conference at Thomas Jefferson School of Law. It is part of a larger investigation into the ways competing constructions of gender, national identity and sexual violence in the context of post-Cold War resurgent nationalisms are located in dominant liberal legal thought, and inform the development of international criminal law.

Topics: Households, International Law, International Criminal Law, Justice, War Crimes

Year: 2001

The Special Court for Sierra Leone’s Consideration of Gender-based Violence: Contributing to Transitional Justice?

Citation:

Oosterveld, Valerie. 2009. “The Special Court for Sierra Leone’s Consideration of Gender-based Violence: Contributing to Transitional Justice?” Human Rights Review 10 (1): 73–98. doi: 10.1007/s12142-008-0098-7.

Author: Valeria Oosterveld

Abstract:

Serious gender-based crimes were committed against women and girls during Sierra Leone’s decade-long armed conflict. This article examines how the Special Court for Sierra Leone has approached these crimes in its first four judgments. The June 20, 2007 trial judgment in the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council case assists international criminal law’s limited understanding of the crime against humanity of forced marriage, but also collapses evidence of that crime into the war crime of outrages upon personal dignity. The February 22, 2008 appeals judgment attempts to correct this misstep. In contrast, the August 2, 2007 trial judgment in the Civil Defence Forces case is virtually silent on crimes committed against women and girls, although the May 28, 2008 appeals judgment attempts to partially redress this silence. This article concludes that the four judgments, considered together, raise the specter that the Special Court could potentially fail to make a significant progressive contribution to gender-sensitive transitional justice.

Topics: Gender, Women, Girls, Gender-Based Violence, International Law, International Criminal Law, Justice, Crimes against Humanity, International Tribunals & Special Courts, Transitional Justice, Post-Conflict Regions: Africa, West Africa Countries: Sierra Leone

Year: 2009

Looking Back, Moving Forward: International Approaches to Addressing Conflict-Related Sexual Violence

Citation:

Pruitt, Lesley. 2012. “Looking Back, Moving Forward: International Approaches to Addressing Conflict-Related Sexual Violence." Journal of Women, Politics & Policy 33 (4): 299-321.

Author: Lesley Pruitt

Topics: Armed Conflict, Gender-Based Violence, International Law, International Organizations, Sexual Violence

Year: 2012

Girl Soldiers and Participation in Hostilities

Citation:

Quénivet, Noëlle. 2008. “Girl Soldiers and Participation in Hostilities.” African Journal of International and Comparative Law 16 (2): 219–35.

Author: Noëlle Quénivet

Abstract:

Recently, organisations working with former child soldiers have observed the growing number of girls involved in armed conflicts. While their fate as sexual slaves is well documented, their participation in hostilities is less acknowledged. Girls, like boys, spy, loot, and kill, but they also cook, clean, and run camps. International humanitarian law, human rights law and international criminal law ban the participation of children in armed conflicts. However, the interpretation of the expression ‘participation in hostilities’ leaves open the possibility that the activities carried out by girls do not fall within the purview of this prohibition, and that, hence, their recruiters are not breaching the aforementioned legal norms.

Topics: Armed Conflict, Combatants, Child Soldiers, Female Combatants, Gender, Girls, International Law, International Criminal Law, International Human Rights, International Humanitarian Law (IHL), Sexual Violence, Sexual Slavery

Year: 2008

Sexual Offenses in Armed Conflict & International Law

Citation:

Quénivet, Noëlle. 2005. Sexual Offenses in Armed Conflict & International Law. Ardsley, NY: Transnational Publishers.

Author: Noëlle Quénivet

Abstract:

In Sexual Offenses in Armed Conflict & International Law, Noelle Quenivet looks to compare feminist writing with the current state of international law, regarding sexual offenses during times of conflict. She presents results of extensive research into the field's burgeoning literature to present her arguments. She furthers her arguments by examining International Criminal Tribunals for the atrocities committed in the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda.

Topics: Armed Conflict, Gender-Based Violence, International Law, International Criminal Law, Justice, International Tribunals & Special Courts, Sexual Violence Regions: Africa, Central Africa, East Africa, Europe, Balkans Countries: Rwanda, Yugoslavia (former)

Year: 2005

Women, Armed Conflict, and International Law

Citation:

Gardam, Judith, and Michelle Jarvis. 2001. Women, Armed Conflict, and International Law. The Hague: Kluwer Law International.

Authors: Judith Gardam, Michelle Jarvis

Topics: Armed Conflict, Gender, Women, International Law

Year: 2001

From the Furies of the Nanking to the Eumenides of the International Criminal Court; The Evolution of Sexual Assaults as International Crimes

Citation:

Ryan, Samantha I. 1999. “From the Furies of the Nanking to the Eumenides of the International Criminal Court; The Evolution of Sexual Assaults as International Crimes.” Pace International Law Review 11 (2): 446–86.

Author: Samantha I. Ryan

Topics: Gender-Based Violence, International Law, International Criminal Law, Justice, International Tribunals & Special Courts, Sexual Violence

Year: 1999

The Importance of Effective Investigation of Sexual Violence and Gender-Based Crimes at the International Criminal Court

Citation:

SáCouto, Susana, and Katherine Cleary. 2009. “The Importance of Effective Investigation of Sexual Violence and Gender-Based Crimes at the International Criminal Court.” American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy & the Law 17 (2): 339–59.

Authors: Susana SáCouto, Katherine Cleary

Topics: Gender-Based Violence, International Law, International Criminal Law, Justice, International Tribunals & Special Courts, Sexual Violence

Year: 2009

Gender, Discourse, and Customary Law in Africa

Citation:

Bond, Johanna E. 2010. “Gender, Discourse, and Customary Law in Africa.” Southern California Law Review 83: 509–73.

Author: Johanna E Bond

Abstract:

Around the world, efforts by states to accommodate cultural pluralism vary in form and vigor. Some multiculturalist states cede to cultural minorities the authority to govern in certain substantive areas, such as family law. Not surprisingly, feminists have raised concerns that a state’s reluctance to govern in areas traditionally seen as “private,” and leaving those areas of law to customary legal systems, leaves women within those minority communities vulnerable to discrimination. Many women value cultural identity, even as they work to eliminate discrimination within their cultural communities. The international human rights community, however, has not always viewed women as committed, active members of their cultural communities. By viewing African women almost exclusively as victims of their culture, the international human rights community has historically undervalued the potential for African women to reformulate cultural policies within their communities. The two primary human rights treaties for the promotion of gender equality in Africa, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women and the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights are dismissive of culture and gender equality, respectively. The Protocol to the African Charter on the Rights of Women in Africa attempts to remedy the shortcomings of CEDAW and the African Charter and offers new hope for promoting gender equality on the continent. In addition to strong substantive rights, the Protocol provides important procedural rights to ensure that women have a voice in the ongoing examination and reformulation of cultural practices and customary law.

Topics: Gender, Women, Gendered Power Relations, Gender Equality/Inequality, Governance, International Law, International Human Rights, Rights, Women's Rights Regions: Africa

Year: 2010

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