1st Edition

Rape, Sexual Violence and Transitional Justice Challenges Lessons from Bosnia Herzegovina

By Janine Clark Copyright 2018
    255 Pages
    by Routledge

    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    It is estimated that 20,000 people were subjected to rape and other forms of sexual violence during the 1992–1995 Bosnian war. Today, these men and women have been largely forgotten. Where are they now? To what extent do their experiences continue to affect and influence their lives, and the lives of those around them? What are the principal problems that these individuals face? Such questions remain largely unanswered. More broadly, the long-term consequences of conflict-related rape and sexual violence are often overlooked. Based on extensive interviews with male and female survivors from all ethnic groups in Bosnia-Herzegovina (BiH), this interdisciplinary book addresses a critical gap in the current literature on rape and sexual violence in conflict situations. In so doing, it uniquely situates and explores the legacy of these crimes within a transitional justice framework. Demonstrating that transitional justice processes in BiH have neglected the long-term effects of rape and sexual violence, it develops and operationalizes a new holistic approach to transitional justice that is based on an expanded conception of ‘legacy’ and has a wider application beyond BiH.

    List of figures   Acknowledgements   Abbreviations   Introduction: Setting the Foundations  1. Rape and Sexual Violence in Conflict: A Historical Overview  2. The Long-Term Effects of Rape and Sexual Violence: A Legacy Gap  3. Survivors of War Rape and Sexual Violence in Bosnia-Herzegovina: Long-Term Psychological Effects and Contributory Contextual Stressors  4. The Wider Impact of War Rape and Sexual Violence in Bosnia-Herzegovina: Survivors and their Families  5. Prosecuting Crimes of Rape and Sexual Violence: Macro Developments, Micro Realities  6. Reparations, Rape and Sexual Violence: Developments and Setbacks in Bosnia- Herzegovina  7. Transitional Justice and Survivors’ Long-Term Needs: Mapping and Operationalizing a New Holistic Approach  Conclusion: Final Reflections   Index

    Biography

    Janine Natalya Clark is a Reader in Gender, International Criminal Law and Transitional Justice at the University of Birmingham, UK.