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Journal of Human Trafficking, Enslavement and Conflict-Related Sexual Violence (JHEC)
2024 / 1 (juni) 1
  • Patricia Viseur Sellers - Special Advisor for Slavery Crimes to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court Visiting Fellow Kellogg College, Law Faculty University of Oxford, Anne-Marie de Brouwer - Impact: Center against Human Trafficking and Sexual Violence in Conflict, Eefje de Volder - Impact: Center against Human Trafficking and Sexual Violence in Conflict

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    Editorial online pdf
  • Patricia Viseur Sellers - Special Advisor for Slavery Crimes to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court Visiting Fellow Kellogg College, Law Faculty University of Oxford, Anne-Marie de Brouwer - Impact: Center against Human Trafficking and Sexual Violence in Conflict, Eefje de Volder - Impact: Center against Human Trafficking and Sexual Violence in Conflict

    Disentangling to Fortify: The Crimes of Slavery, the Slave Trade and Human Trafficking online pdf
  • Siobhán Mullally - UN Special Rapporteur on trafficking in persons, especially women and children; Irish Centre for Human Rights, School of Law, University of Galway

    Trafficking in Persons in Situations of Conflict: Accountability, Prevention and Protection Gaps online pdf
  • Pramila Patten - Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict, Patricia Viseur Sellers - Special Advisor for Slavery Crimes to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court Visiting Fellow Kellogg College, Law Faculty University of Oxford, Anne-Marie de Brouwer - Impact: Center against Human Trafficking and Sexual Violence in Conflict, Eefje de Volder - Impact: Center against Human Trafficking and Sexual Violence in Conflict

    The Work of the Office of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict: Q&A with Pramila Patten online pdf
  • Aimée Comrie - The views expressed herein are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations.

    Moving Parts: At the Intersections of Trafficking in Persons, Slavery, and the Slave Trade online pdf
  • Cécile Aptel - Deputy Director UNICEF’s Global Office of Research and Foresight; Professor of Practice, Fletcher School, Patricia Viseur Sellers - Special Advisor for Slavery Crimes to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court Visiting Fellow Kellogg College, Law Faculty University of Oxford, Anne-Marie de Brouwer - Impact: Center against Human Trafficking and Sexual Violence in Conflict, Eefje de Volder - Impact: Center against Human Trafficking and Sexual Violence in Conflict

    Atrocity Crimes, Children and International Criminal Courts: Q&A with Cécile Aptel online pdf
  • Rosemary Grey - Sydney Law School, University of Sydney

    Bred ‘Like Cattle’: Forced Procreation in the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia online pdf
  • Alexandra Lily Kather - Co-founder, Emergent Justice Collective

    The Adjudication of Slavery Crimes against the Yazidi by German Courts: Evolving Jurisprudence and the Need for Rectifying Legal Amendments in German Law online pdf
  • Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum - Professor of Law, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law

    All Roads Lead to Rome: Combating Impunity for Perpetration of Slave Trade and Slavery Crimes online pdf
  • Bios Contributors Special Issue (in alphabetical order) online pdf

All Roads Lead to Rome: Combating Impunity for Perpetration of Slave Trade and Slavery Crimes

Toon als PDF
Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum - Professor of Law, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law


Abstract

The Republic of Sierra Leone has proposed amendments to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) to include, inter alia, provisions for the slave trade as a crime against humanity and has recommended that the General Assembly include the slave trade as an enumerated crime in the Draft articles on Prevention and Punishment of Crimes Against Humanity (CAH) (Draft articles). This declaration came nearly five years after Cardozo’s Benjamin B Ferencz Human Rights and Atrocity Prevention Clinic, on behalf of slavery crimes expert Patricia Viseur Sellers, sent commentaries to the United Nations International Law Commission (ILC) to revise in a similar fashion the Draft articles.
The Rome Statute creates a wide impunity gap by omitting the slave trade entirely as a war crime and crime against humanity and by including only those conflict-related slavery acts that include causing someone to engage in an act of a sexual nature. Specifically, the Rome Statute does not enumerate the slave trade or slavery under Article 8 as war crimes. It does not define the slave trade within the crime of enslavement under Article 7(g) as a crime against humanity or explicitly enumerate the slave trade within the context of a widespread or systematic attack against a civilian population. War crimes conduct is not captured fully or explicitly under ICC jurisdiction because the Rome Statute sanctions only persons exercising powers attaching to the rights of ownership who also cause that person to engage in an act of a sexual nature. Crimes against humanity conduct also escapes legal sanction when perpetrators transport or otherwise engage in any slave trade acts without exercising powers attaching to the right of ownership over a person.
Furthermore, the Rome Statute’s bifurcation of enslavement and sexual slavery lead to non-factual, incomplete, and discriminatory results. Sexual slavery is enslavement; its separate enumeration as a crime against humanity has required some victims to prove additionally that they were caused to engage in an act of a sexual nature in violation of non-discrimination and others’ slavery harms to escape legal characterization altogether.
Sierra Leone’s proposals to amend the Rome Statute and CAH Draft articles to enumerate, inter alia, the slave trade as a crime against humanity will go a long way in closing the impunity gaps in international law for slavery and slave trade crimes’ perpetration. Such amendments will bring the Rome Statute and CAH Draft articles in line with customary international law regarding the slave trade, which is currently ‘missing in action’ in international criminal law adjudication and redress.

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