Sexual violence against women in South Sudan is rife amidst the ongoing internal armed conflict that erupted on 15 December 2013. As a new country emerging from civil wars spanning more than two decades, South Sudan has an enormous, yet unenviable task of reconstruction and development in all spheres. The justice system is no exception, and to this end it needs serious reform of its customary and statutory laws in order to ensure that it can effectively criminalize these crimes and prosecute offenders of sexual violence. This article reflects on whether South Sudan currently has the capacity to achieve this
Sudan has been undergoing profound changes characterized by an uncertain transition from conflict to...
Several armed conflicts have marked the past two decades in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DR...
Rachel Ibreck and Alex de Waal argue that, despite the ongoing violence, South Sudan is not a lawles...
This report investigates criminal law reform in Sudan, focusing on two important and controversial l...
The article explores the variety of normative and legal resources that Sudanese women inside and out...
This article discusses how rape and other forms of sexual violence have been prominent features of t...
Despite having one of the most inclusive and progressive constitutions in the world, South Africa (S...
This study examines the prospects for accountability for international crimes committed in South Sud...
Three decades of Islamist rule institutionalized a culture of violence against women in Sudan. The C...
This is an Arabic translation of the CMI report Women and Girls Caught between Rape and Adultery in...
This thesis focuses on GBV against women and girls in conflict and post-conflict societies with a pa...
Despite persistent impunity for conflict-related sexual violence, there have been a limited number o...
The 2015 Agreement on the Resolution of the Conflict in the Republic of South Sudan provides quite a...
The South African Law Commission has proposed a number of substantive and procedural reforms to Sout...
This article aims to assess ways in which different justice schemes may operate together for an impr...
Sudan has been undergoing profound changes characterized by an uncertain transition from conflict to...
Several armed conflicts have marked the past two decades in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DR...
Rachel Ibreck and Alex de Waal argue that, despite the ongoing violence, South Sudan is not a lawles...
This report investigates criminal law reform in Sudan, focusing on two important and controversial l...
The article explores the variety of normative and legal resources that Sudanese women inside and out...
This article discusses how rape and other forms of sexual violence have been prominent features of t...
Despite having one of the most inclusive and progressive constitutions in the world, South Africa (S...
This study examines the prospects for accountability for international crimes committed in South Sud...
Three decades of Islamist rule institutionalized a culture of violence against women in Sudan. The C...
This is an Arabic translation of the CMI report Women and Girls Caught between Rape and Adultery in...
This thesis focuses on GBV against women and girls in conflict and post-conflict societies with a pa...
Despite persistent impunity for conflict-related sexual violence, there have been a limited number o...
The 2015 Agreement on the Resolution of the Conflict in the Republic of South Sudan provides quite a...
The South African Law Commission has proposed a number of substantive and procedural reforms to Sout...
This article aims to assess ways in which different justice schemes may operate together for an impr...
Sudan has been undergoing profound changes characterized by an uncertain transition from conflict to...
Several armed conflicts have marked the past two decades in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DR...
Rachel Ibreck and Alex de Waal argue that, despite the ongoing violence, South Sudan is not a lawles...