The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) has been renowned for prosecuting and convicting several high-ranking officials for rape and other forms of sexual violence committed during the war in the former Yugoslavia, but for wartime survivors of sexual violence this has only been a symbolic justice. Rachele Marconi looks at the case of A. v Bosnia in the fight for recognition and effective reparations and why this case has been so significant
Sexual violence perpetrated during armed conflict is a notoriously prolific, yet oft neglected pheno...
Exploding the strategy pioneered a year earlier in Croatia, Serbian military forces in Bosnia-Herzeg...
Abstract: Sixteen years after the end of the war in the Balkans, Bosnia is still in a state of devas...
This paper investigates if the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia has been ef...
Transitional justice has been treated as one of the pillars in the processes of post-conflict state ...
The question of wartime rape and sexual violence has been extensively covered in academic literature...
This study identifies areas of improvement for the ICTY. Qualitative analyses of ICTY trial transcri...
This article examines the process of Reparation and Justice for the rape victims in Bosnia and Herze...
Between 1992-1995, an estimated 20,000-50,000 women were raped during the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina....
Wartime sexual violence is currently being prosecuted in numerous legal institutions across the worl...
Responses to the prevalence of wartime rape in Bosnia-Herzegovina during the 1990s civil war has bee...
This article focuses on the nexus between wartime sexual violence and genocide in relation to the 19...
In the conflict in Bosnia-Herzegovina, one of the critical elements of the ethnic cleansing regimes ...
For almost four years, former Yugoslavia was ravaged by a war in which acts of incomprehensible and ...
The jurisdiction of the African Court of Justice and Human and Peoples’ Rights (acjhpr) will include...
Sexual violence perpetrated during armed conflict is a notoriously prolific, yet oft neglected pheno...
Exploding the strategy pioneered a year earlier in Croatia, Serbian military forces in Bosnia-Herzeg...
Abstract: Sixteen years after the end of the war in the Balkans, Bosnia is still in a state of devas...
This paper investigates if the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia has been ef...
Transitional justice has been treated as one of the pillars in the processes of post-conflict state ...
The question of wartime rape and sexual violence has been extensively covered in academic literature...
This study identifies areas of improvement for the ICTY. Qualitative analyses of ICTY trial transcri...
This article examines the process of Reparation and Justice for the rape victims in Bosnia and Herze...
Between 1992-1995, an estimated 20,000-50,000 women were raped during the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina....
Wartime sexual violence is currently being prosecuted in numerous legal institutions across the worl...
Responses to the prevalence of wartime rape in Bosnia-Herzegovina during the 1990s civil war has bee...
This article focuses on the nexus between wartime sexual violence and genocide in relation to the 19...
In the conflict in Bosnia-Herzegovina, one of the critical elements of the ethnic cleansing regimes ...
For almost four years, former Yugoslavia was ravaged by a war in which acts of incomprehensible and ...
The jurisdiction of the African Court of Justice and Human and Peoples’ Rights (acjhpr) will include...
Sexual violence perpetrated during armed conflict is a notoriously prolific, yet oft neglected pheno...
Exploding the strategy pioneered a year earlier in Croatia, Serbian military forces in Bosnia-Herzeg...
Abstract: Sixteen years after the end of the war in the Balkans, Bosnia is still in a state of devas...