Feminism and its (dis)contents: Criminalizing wartime rape in Bosnia and Herzegovina

成果类型:
Review
署名作者:
Engle, K
刊物名称:
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW
ISSN/ISSBN:
0002-9300
DOI:
10.2307/3396669
发表日期:
2005
页码:
778-+
关键词:
INTERNATIONAL-LAW women WAR POLITICS yugoslav GENDER
摘要:
Today many feminists seem relatively content with the treatment of rape and other sexual violence against women under international criminal law. In the context of the conflict in Bosnia and Herzegovina in the early 1990s, feminist activists made a concerted effort to affect the statute establishing the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), the rules of evidence under which rape and other crimes of sexual violence would be prosecuted, the from the indictments of crimes of sexual violence would take, and the strategies and legal argumentation made at both the trial and the appellate levels. For the most part, much to the surprise of many feminists themselves, they have been successful. As Joanne Barkan comments: From the start, most observers considered the [ICTY] a sop to human rights and feminist activists who wanted intervention.... Almost no one expected it to succeed. And yet to some extent, at least for women, it did.(1) The ICTY's treatment of rape, of course, resulted from more than the work of feminist advocates. Attention to the rapes in Bosnia and Herzegovina coincided with increasing support in general for an international criminal law that could be enforced through tribunals and courts. To create such law, statutes would need to be drafted and crimes would need to be listed and then prosecuted. Rape had long been considered a violation of international law, and therefore its inclusion per se was not that radical.(2) Although rape had not always been explicitly listed in war crimes treaties, many states and intergovernmental organizations argued in the context of Bosnia and Herzegovina that both the Geneva Conventions and customary international law provided a legal basis for criminalizing rape.(3) There was even some precedent for seeing rape as a crime against humanity.(4) Nevertheless, the situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina, together with that in Rwanda and the subsequent drafting of international criminal statutes, did provide feminists and nonfeminists