Anne-Marie de Brouwer, Eefje de Volder, Chiun Min Seah - Impact: Center against Human Trafficking and Sexual Violence in Conflict
Rina Ghafoerkhan - Equator Foundation, Arq Psychotrauma Expert Group; Utrecht University, Willem Scholte - Equator Foundation, Arq Psychotrauma Expert Group; Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam, Eefje de Volder - Impact: Center against Human Trafficking and Sexual Violence in Conflict, Anne-Marie de Brouwer - Impact: Center against Human Trafficking and Sexual Violence in Conflict
Farah Mahmood - Consultant in International Criminal and Human Rights Law
Milena Adamczewska - The Office of the Commissioner for Human Rights of the Republic of Poland
Patrick Cammaert - Major General (ret)
Rossella Pulvirenti - School of Law, Liverpool John Moores University, Elena Abrusci - School of Law, University of Essex
Aimée Comrie - UNODC
Patricia Viseur Sellers - International Criminal Lawyer, Special Advisor on Gender to the Prosecutor of the International Crim
Yoon Hee-soon - Researcher at the Korea Future Initiative
Rabia Akhtar - Human rights expert
The nexus between conflict-related sexual violence and trafficking for sexual exploitation in times of conflict
In its 2018 report on conflict-related sexual violence the UN Secretary-General reiterated the importance of addressing the nexus between conflict-related sexual violence and trafficking in human beings for purposes of sexual exploitation in conflict. In this article we will explore this nexus from a psychological and a legal point of view. During conflict the climate of impunity and the extreme contrast between the mighty and the powerless offers an optimal setting and inevitable ground for sexual violence. In general, but in particular during conflict, being victimized by sexual violence once can put individuals at risk for similar or other forms of sexual re-victimization. For the victim who endured sexual violence, context hardly matters for its psychological impact. Therefore, in accordance with the UN Secretary-General report, from a psychological view there is no justification for a clear-cut distinction between conflict-related sexual violence and trafficking in human beings for purposes of sexual exploitation in conflict. Yet, from a legal perspective, this differentiation does matter: the legal definitions form the basis for the prosecution of perpetrators on the one hand and for access to particular rights for victims on the other. This article should be seen as a first exploration into the nexus between both crimes, when it comes to the impact on the lives of the victims/survivors, the definition of the crimes, and the resulting access to rights for victims/survivors of these crimes.
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