000 nam a22 7a 4500
999 _c16969
_d16969
020 _a9789462405004
040 _cRULE
082 _a323 MIN 2017
100 _aSeah, Chiun Min.
245 _aSexual violence against child soldeirs :
_ban analysis of the development of international criminal and humanitarian law.
260 _bWillem-Jan van der Wolf :
_c2017.
300 _a84 p. :
_c24 cm.
500 _aContents Acknowledgements 1. Introduction 2. Legal Framework Concerning Child Soldiers in International Humanitarian Law a. Provisions Regarding Sexual Violence and Children b. Types of Participation in Armed Conflict i) Direct Indirect and Active Participations c) Child Soldiers' Membership in Armed Groups 3. Legal Framework Concerning Child Soldiers in International Criminal Law a. The Accountability of Child Solders-The Case of Dominic Ongwen 4. The Limits of International Criminal and Humanitarian Law 5. Conclusion Bibliography
520 _aThe subjects of child soldiers and conflict-related sexual violence have recurrently been explored but issue of child soldiers who are being sexually violated during armed warfare seem to be a legal gap in international criminal and humanitarian law. International humanitarian law does not generally regulate the conduct of combatants towards other combatants in the same armed group as the conduct of fighters towards soldiers on the same side of the conflict would presumably be monitored by their own internal discipline framework. Whilst there may be a universal understanding that any harmful attacks would be against the enemy, sexual violence is inflicted extensively on both sides equally and in this context, against child soldiers who have limited protection by the law and their own militaries. On that account, this book examines how international criminal law punishes perpetrators who sexually abuse child soldiers within their own troops and how international humanitarian law protects these victims. The distinction between direct/indirect and active participation and its significance/consequences is explored as well as question of when sexual slavery begins and ends with regards to participation of child soldiers and the issue of membership of child soldiers in armed forces. This book also investigates if children who were conscripted and enlisted as child soldiers have separate standards of accountability for the crimes they commit, specifically with regards to the ongoing case of Dominic Ongwen at the International Criminal Court as its point of convergence. Despite the promising progress Bosco Ntaganda's case at the ICC has made, it falls short with engaging in these complex legal questions as it assumes that sexual slavery and participation in hostilities occur at separate times when neither of these exist in a vacuum. Therefore, the limits of international criminal law and humanitarian law in this sphere is delved into with reference to relevant case laws.
650 0 _aInternational Law
942 _cEB