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Journal of Human Trafficking, Enslavement and Conflict-Related Sexual Violence (JHEC)
2021 / 1 (Juni) 1
 
  • OPEN ACCESS
    Editorial online pdf
 
  • Conny Rijken - Tilburg University, Leyla Khadraoui - Tilburg University, Marian Tankink - Independent consultant

    (Preventing) Secondary Victimisation of Trafficking Victims through Law Enforcement Interventions online pdf
 
  • Sunneva Gilmore - School of Law, Queen’s University Belfast

    Better Late than Never: Reparations for Sexual Violence in the Ntaganda case before the International Criminal Court online pdf
 
  • Anne-Marie de Brouwer and Eefje de Volder - Impact: Center against Human Trafficking and Sexual Violence in Conflict

    International Criminal Court (ICC): Dominic Ongwen online pdf
 
  • Manouk AW van de Klundert - Tilburg University (BSc), University of Copenhagen (student)

    Sexual Terrorism and Social Stigma: How Stigma Influences the Pathway to Justice for Survivors of Boko Haram, and Potential Ways Forward online pdf

Sexual Terrorism and Social Stigma: How Stigma Influences the Pathway to Justice for Survivors of Boko Haram, and Potential Ways Forward

Toon als PDF
Manouk AW van de Klundert - Tilburg University (BSc), University of Copenhagen (student)*


Boko Haram has victimised numerous women and girls using tactics of sexual terrorism. As criminal justice for this crime is rarely obtained, this article seeks to find ways to bring social justice to its survivors. However, the stigmatisation of the survivors, which is signalled to frequently occur, hampers this process greatly. As survivors of sexual terrorism suffer from stigma, they are being denied social justice, since their position in society is compromised or their suffering is even being denied. This article comprises a literature review that aims to combine published work concerning sexual terrorism, social justice and stigma in an explorative, yet systematic way to identify underlying mechanisms and classify potential ways forward. It was found that stigmatisation, both from wider society as survivors’ close connections can have a great psychological impact, on top of the frequently severe physical, psychological, and socio-economic consequences that sexual terrorism already brings forward. Six kinds of interventions were found to reduce the survivor’s suffering and stigmatisation, thereby enlarging their social justice.

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