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ID163272
Title ProperDeploying justice
Other Title Informationstrategic accountability for wartime sexual violence
LanguageENG
AuthorLake, Milli ;  Loken, Meredith ;  Cronin-Furman, Kate
Summary / Abstract (Note)Why do governments and militaries publicly condemn and prosecute particular forms of abuse? This article explores the Sri Lankan government's decision to promote limited legal accountability for state-perpetrated rape committed in a country otherwise renowned for widespread impunity. We argue that rather than representing a turn against impunity, the symbolic stance against conflict-related sexual violence in a small number of high-profile cases served an explicitly politico-military agenda. The state deployed legal accountability in specific cases to garner political legitimacy among key domestic audiences. The Sri Lankan government drew on the symbolism of female victimhood to mobilize support at a time when support for military counterinsurgency was waning. We show that governments can uniquely instrumentalize sexual violence cases to establish moral authority and territorial legitimacy. Through an examination of the domestic legal response to state-perpetrated human rights abuses, we illustrate the many ways in which women's bodies—and the law—can be mobilized in war to serve military ends.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Studies Quarterly Vol. 62, 4, Dec-2018; p751–764
Journal SourceInternational Studies Quarterly Vol: 62 No 4
Key WordsCivil Wars ;  Domestic Violence ;  Deploying Justice


 
 
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