Using Nancy Fraser’s (2007a) tripartite model of justice as a theoretical backdrop, this thesis critically evaluates the United Nation’s (UN) International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR), in relation to how this Tribunal has both secured and limited opportunities to ’do’ justice for sexual violence (SV) victims. This thesis applies a gendered approach to Fraser’s model, and considers how justice has been secured by women, based on principles of recognition, redistribution and representation. Using documentary methods, the thesis analyses ICTR cases concerning SV, to determine how this Tribunal has responded to SV committed against women and girls throughout the Rwandan genocide. This thesis demonstrates that, while the Tribunal has sec...
This thesis explores the experiences of women in the transitional justice process that has followed ...
Justice for conflict-related sexual violence remains a critical problem for global society today. Th...
46 pagesWhereas prosecutions in international criminal courts have increasingly included charges of ...
Using Nancy Fraser’s (2007a) tripartite model of justice as a theoretical backdrop, this thesis crit...
Within this Article I seek to develop a feminist legal theory of justice, by questioning the ability...
This study has set out to investigate the legacy of post-genocide judicial institutions mandated to ...
This paper offers an examination of international justice from the perspective of rape survivors fro...
By an examination of the judgments of the International Criminal Tribunals, this essay reflects upon...
This paper examines certain procedural strategies adopted by the International Criminal Tribunal for...
The question of wartime rape and sexual violence has been extensively covered in academic literature...
The past three decades has seen increasing recognition of the gender-specific impact of armed confli...
One of the most significant social, political, and legal developments in contemporary international ...
In one hundred days between April 6 and July 15, 1994, the Rwandan genocide took away the lives of a...
Survivors of human rights abuses need to experience a sense of justice to support their individual r...
Many countries in Africa have experienced conflicts characterized by gross human rights violations, ...
This thesis explores the experiences of women in the transitional justice process that has followed ...
Justice for conflict-related sexual violence remains a critical problem for global society today. Th...
46 pagesWhereas prosecutions in international criminal courts have increasingly included charges of ...
Using Nancy Fraser’s (2007a) tripartite model of justice as a theoretical backdrop, this thesis crit...
Within this Article I seek to develop a feminist legal theory of justice, by questioning the ability...
This study has set out to investigate the legacy of post-genocide judicial institutions mandated to ...
This paper offers an examination of international justice from the perspective of rape survivors fro...
By an examination of the judgments of the International Criminal Tribunals, this essay reflects upon...
This paper examines certain procedural strategies adopted by the International Criminal Tribunal for...
The question of wartime rape and sexual violence has been extensively covered in academic literature...
The past three decades has seen increasing recognition of the gender-specific impact of armed confli...
One of the most significant social, political, and legal developments in contemporary international ...
In one hundred days between April 6 and July 15, 1994, the Rwandan genocide took away the lives of a...
Survivors of human rights abuses need to experience a sense of justice to support their individual r...
Many countries in Africa have experienced conflicts characterized by gross human rights violations, ...
This thesis explores the experiences of women in the transitional justice process that has followed ...
Justice for conflict-related sexual violence remains a critical problem for global society today. Th...
46 pagesWhereas prosecutions in international criminal courts have increasingly included charges of ...