Sex and gender crimes in the new international law past, present, future / by Alona Hagay-Frey ; translated from Hebrew by Stefanie Raker.
Material type: TextSeries: Nijhoff eBook titles 2011 | Nijhoff Law Specials ; 75. | Human Rights and Humanitarian Law E-Books Online, Collection 2011, ISBN: 9789004222939Publisher: Leiden ; Boston : Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2011Description: 1 online resourceContent type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9789004215931
- 345/.02532 22
- KZ7162 .H34 2011
Cover image | Item type | Current library | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
eBook Perpetual | Rashtriya Raksha University | 345 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | EP00315 |
Adapted from the author's thesis (LLM)
Preliminary Material / A. Hagay-Frey -- Introduction: The Historical Vacuum / A. Hagay-Frey -- Introduction To Part One / A. Hagay-Frey -- 1. International Law From A Feminist Perspective / A. Hagay-Frey -- 2. Law Reform And Reality? / A. Hagay-Frey -- 3. Rape As A Unique Crime Under Domestic Law / A. Hagay-Frey -- Introduction to Part Two / A. Hagay-Frey -- 4. The Era Of Silence / A. Hagay-Frey -- 5. The Era Of Honor / A. Hagay-Frey -- 6. A New Direction – Towards A New Era? / A. Hagay-Frey -- Introduction to Part Three / A. Hagay-Frey -- 7. Summary Of Achievements And Problems / A. Hagay-Frey -- 8. Part Of Existing Crime Categories Or A Discrete Crime? / A. Hagay-Frey -- 9. Sex And Gender Crimes As A Discrete Crime – A Preliminary Draft / A. Hagay-Frey -- 10. Preliminary Draft Of A New Crime Category / A. Hagay-Frey -- Summary And Conclusions / A. Hagay-Frey -- Bibliography / A. Hagay-Frey -- Index / A. Hagay-Frey.
In times of conflict, women have traditionally been excluded from protection of the law. This book analyzes the treatment of sex and gender crimes under international law by identifying various legal eras, from the inception of international criminal law until its most recent formulation, the Rome Statute. The author conducts her critical journey armed with insights about the development of the crime of rape in domestic law and feminist theories, and exposes gaps and silences in international law's treatment of sex and gender crimes. The author claims that the underlying stratum of sex crimes – the gender stratum – must be acknowledged. Hence, it is not sufficient to treat rape as another offense under existing traditional crime categories. It must also be anchored as a separate crime category that clearly establishes the boundaries of the legal norm, harmonizes different nations’ laws, and eradicates the remnants of patriarchy linked to this offense.
There are no comments on this title.