Gender

_Adler, Reva, Cyanne E. Loyle, and Judith Globerman. 2008. A Calamity in the Neighborhood: Women's Participation in the Rwanda Genocide. Genocide Studies and Prevention 2 (3):209-233.

_Agosin, Marjorie. 1993. Surviving Beyond Fear: Women, Children and Human Rights in Latin America. Fredonia, NY: White Wine Press.

_Aguirre, Daniel and Irene Pietropaoli. December, 2008. Gender Equality, Development and Transitional Justice: The Case of Nepal. The International Journal of Transitional Justice. Oxford University Press.

_Ahwirengobeng, Fred. 1993. Gender, Entrepreneurship and Socio-economic Reparation in South-Africa. Review of Black Political Economy 22 (2):151-165.

_Allen, Beverly. 1996. Rape Warfare: The Hidden Genocide in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.

_Askin, Kelly D. 1999. Sexual Violence in Decisions and Indictments of the Yugoslav and Rwandan Tribunals: Current Status. American Journal of International Law 93 (1):97-123.

_Askin, Kelly Dawn. 1997. War Crimes against Women: Prosecution in International War Crimes Tribunals. The Hague, Netherlands: Martin Nijhoff.

_Askin, Kelly Dawn. 2000. Women's Issues in International Criminal Law: Recent Developments and the Potential Contribution of the ICC. In International Crimes, Peace, and Human Rights: The Role of the International Criminal Court, edited by D. L. Shelton. Ardsley, NY: Transnational Publishers.

_Askin, Kelly Dawn. 2003. The Quest for Post-Conflict Gender Justice. Columbia Journal of Transnational Law 41 (3):509-522.

_Aydelott, Danise. 1993. Mass Rape During War: Prosecuting Bosnian Rapists Under International Law. Emory International Law Review 7 (2):585-631.

_Bailey, Claudia Paz y Paz. 2006. Guatemala: Gender and Reparations for Human Rights Violations. In What Happened to the Women? Gender and Reparations for Human Rights Violations, edited by R. Rubio-Marin. New York, NY: Social Science Research Council.

_Bassiouni, M. Cherif, and Marcia McCormick. 1996. Sexual Violence: An Invisible Weapon of War in the Former Yugoslavia. Chicago, IL: International Human Rights Law Institute.

_Bell, Christine, and Catherine O'Rourke. 2007. Does Feminism Need a Theory of Transitional Justice? An Introductory Essay. International Journal of Transitional Justice 1 (1):23-44.

_Benson, Carolyn. 2007. Further Trouble for Unsettled Waters: Attention to Gender in the Debate on Black Reparations. In Reparations: Interdisciplinary Inquiries, edited by J. Miller and R. Kumar. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

_Blatt, Deborah. 1991. Recognizing Rape as a Method of Torture. Review of Law and Social Change 19 (4):821-865.

_Boling, David. 1995. Mass Rape, Enforced Prostitution, and the Japanese Imperial Army: Japan Eschews International Legal Responsibility? Baltimore, MD: University of Maryland School of Law.

_Boon, Kristen. 2001. Rape and Forced Pregnancy Under the ICC Statute: Human Dignity, Autonomy, and Consent. Columbia Human Rights Law Review 32 (3):625-674.

_Campbell, Kirsten. 2003. Rape as a 'Crime Against Humanity': Trauma, Law and Justice in the ICTY. Journal of Human Rights 2 (4):507-515.

_Campbell, Kirsten. 2007. The Gender of Transitional Justice: Law, Sexual Violence and the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia. International Journal of Transitional Justice 1 (3):411-432.

_Chesterman, Simon. 1997. Never Again. and Again: Law, Order, and the Gender of War Crimes in Bosnia and Beyond. Yale Journal of International Law 22 (2):299-344.

_Copelon, Rhonda. 1995. Women and War Crimes. St. John's Law Review 69 (1-2):61-68.

_Copelon, Rhonda. 2000. Gender Crimes as War Crimes: Integrating Crimes against Women into International Criminal Law. McGill Law Journal 46 (1):217-240.

_Couillard, Valérie. 2007. The Nairobi Declaration: Redefining Reparation for Women Victims of Sexual Violence. International Journal of Transitional Justice 1 (3):444-453.

_Du Toit, H. Louise. 2007. Feminism and the Ethics of Reconciliation. In Law and the Politics of Reconciliation, edited by S. Veitch. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate.

_Duggan, Colleen, Claudia Paz y Paz Bailey, and Julie Guillerot. 2008. Reparations for Sexual and Reproductive Violence: Prospects for Achieving Gender Justice in Guatemala and Peru. International Journal of Transitional Justice 2 (2):192-213.

_Ellis, Mark S. 2006/07. Breaking the Silence: Rape As An International Crime. Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law 28 (2):225-248.

_Fisher, Jo. 1993. Out of the Shadows. Women, Resistance and Politics in South America. London, UK: Latin American Bureau.

_Fitzgerald, Kate. 1997. Problems of Prosecution and Adjudication of Rape and Other Sexual Assaults under International Law. European Journal of International Law 8 (4):638-663.

_Goldblatt, Beth. 2006. Evaluating the Gender Content of Reparations: Lessons from South Africa. In What Happened to the Women? Gender and Reparations for Human Rights Violations, edited by R. Rubio-Marin. New York, NY: Social Science Research Council.

_Goldblatt, Beth, and Sheila Meintjes. 1998. South African Women Demand the Truth. In What Woman Do in Wartime: Gender and Conflict in Africa, edited by M. Turshen and C. Twagiramariya. London, UK: Zed Books.

_Green, Jennifer. 1994. Affecting the Rules for the Prosecution of Rape and Other Gender-Based Violence Before the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia: A Feminist Proposal and Critique. Hastings Women's Law Journal 5 (2):171-242.

_Green, Llezlie L. 2002. Gender Hate Propaganda and Sexual Violence in the Rwandan Genocide: An Argument for Intersectionality in International Law. Columbia Human Rights Law Review 33 (2):733-776.

_Guillerot, Julie. 2006. Linking Gender and Reparations in Peru: A Failed Opportunity. In What Happened to the Women? Gender and Reparations for Human Rights Violations, edited by R. Rubio-Marín. New York, NY: Social Science Research Council.

_Hamber, Brandon. 2007. Masculinity and Transitional Justice: An Exploratory Essay. International Journal of Transitional Justice 1 (3):375-390.

_Hsu, Yvonne. 1993. Comfort Women from Korea: Japan's World War II Sex Slaves and the Legitimacy of Their Claims for Reparations. Pacific Rim Law and Policy 2 (1):97-129.

_Kelsall, Michelle Staggs, and Shanee Stepakoff. 2007. 'When We Wanted to Talk About Rape': Silencing Sexual Violence at the Special Court for Sierra Leone. International Journal of Transitional Justice 1 (3):355-374.

_Kim, Chin, and Stanley S. Kim. 1998. Delayed Justice: The Case of the Japanese Imperial Military Sex Slaves. UCLA Pacific Basin Law Journal 16 (2):263-280.

_Kim, Hyun Sook. 1997. History and Memory: The 'Comfort Women' Controversy. Positions 5 (1):73-106.

_King, Jamesina. 2006. Gender and Reparations in Sierra Leone: The Wounds of War Remain Open. In What Happened to the Women? Gender and Reparations for Human Rights Violations, edited by R. Rubio-Marín. New York, NY: Social Science Research Council.

_Kohn, Elizabeth A. 1994. Rape as a Weapon of War: Women's Human Rights During the Dissolution of Yugoslavia. Golden Gate University Law Review 24 (1):199-228.

_Krass, Caroline. 1994. Bringing the Perpetrators of Rape in the Balkans to Justice: Time for an International Criminal Court. Denver Journal of International Law and Policy 22 (2/3):317-374.

_Laplante, Lisa J. 2007. Women as Political Participants: Peru’s Approach to Psychosocial Post-Conflict Recovery, 13 Peace & Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology 313.

_Laviolette, Nicole. 1998. Commanding Rape: Sexual Violence, Command Responsibility, and the Prosecution of Superiors by the International Criminal Tribunals for the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda. Canadian Yearbook of International Law 36:93-149.

_Lykes, M. Brinton, Mary M. Brabeck, Theresa Ferns, and Angela Radan. 1993. Human Rights and Mental Health Among Latin-American Women in Situations of State-Sponsored Violence. Psychology of Women Quarterly 17 (4):525-544.

_Lyons, Margaret A. 2001. Hearing the Cry without Answering the Call: Rape, Genocide, and the Rwandan Tribunal. Syracuse Journal of International Law and Commerce 28:99-124.

_Marin, Lynda. 1991. Speaking out Together: Testimonials of Latin American Women. Latin American Perspectives Summer:51-68.

_McDonald, Gabrielle Kirk. 2000. Crimes of Sexual Violence: The Experience of the International Criminal Tribunal. Columbia Journal of Transnational Law 39 (1):1-17.

_Meertens, Donny and Margarita Zambrano. July, 2010. Citizenship Deferred: The Politics of Victimhood, Land Restitution and Gender Justice in the Colombian (Post?) Conflict. The International Journal of Transitional Justice. Oxford University Press.

_Meron, Theodor. 1993. Rape as a Crime Under International Humanitarian Law. American Journal of International Law 87 (3):424-427.

_Nahapetian, Kate. 1999. Selective Justice: Prosecuting Rape in the International Criminal Tribunals for the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda. Berkeley Women's Law Journal 14:126-135.

_Neuffer, Elizabeth. 1998. Justice at Hague Moves Slowly for Bosnia Rape Victims. Boston Globe, 10.

_Ni Aoláin, Fionnuala, and Eilish Rooney. 2007. Underenforcement and Intersectionality: Gendered Aspects of Transition for Women. International Journal of Transitional Justice 1 (3):338-354.

_Niarchos, Catherine N. 1995. Women, War, and Rape: Challenges Facing The International for the Former Yugoslavia. Human Rights Quarterly 17 (4):649-690.

_Nowrojee, Binaifer. 1996. Shattered Lives: Sexual Violence During the Rwandan Genocide and Its Aftermath. New York, NY: Human Rights Watch.

_Nowrojee, Binaifer. 2005. Making the Invisible War Crime Visible: Post-Conflict Justice for Sierra Leone's Rape Victims. Harvard Human Rights Journal 18:85-105.

_Okello, Moses Chrispus, and Lucy Hovil. 2007. Confronting the Reality of Gender-based Violence in Northern Uganda. International Journal of Transitional Justice 1 (3):433-443.

_Parker, Karen, and Jennifer Chew. 1994. Compensation for Japan's World War II War-Rape Victims. Hastings International and Comparative Law Review 17 (3):497-550.

_Reynolds, Sarnata. 1998. Deterring and Preventing Rape and Sexual Slavery During Periods of Armed Conflict. Law and Inequality 16 (2):601-632.

_Rombouts, Heidy. 2006. Women and Reparations in Rwanda: A Long Path to Travel. In What Happened to the Women? Gender and Reparations for Human Rights Violations, edited by R. Rubio-Marín. New York, NY: Social Science Research Council.

_Ross, Fiona. 2003. Bearing Witness: Women and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in South Africa. London, UK: Pluto Press.

_Rosser, Emily. 2007. Depoliticised Speech and Sexed Visibility: Women, Gender and Sexual Violence in the 1999 Guatemalan Comisión para el Esclarecimiento Histórico Report. International Journal of Transitional Justice 1 (3):391-410.

_Rubio-Marín, Ruth. 2006. The Gender of Reparations: Setting the Agenda. In What Happened to the Women? Gender and Reparations for Human Rights Violations, edited by R. Rubio-Marín. New York, NY: Social Science Research Council.

_Rubio-Marín, Ruth, ed. 2006. What Happened to the Women? Gender and Reparations for Human Rights Violations. Edited by International Center for Transitional Justice. New York, NY: Social Science Research Council.

_Rubio-Marín, Ruth, and Pablo De Greiff. 2007. Women and Reparations. International Journal of Transitional Justice 1 (3):318-337.

_Salzman, Todd A. 1998. Rape Camps as a Means of Ethnic Cleansing: Religious, Cultural, and Ethical Responses to Rape Victims in the Former Yugoslavia. Human Rights Quarterly 20 (2):348-378.

_Sanders, Mark. 1998. Ambiguities of Mourning: Law, Custom, Literature and Women before South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Law Text Culture 4 (2):105-151.

_Saporta Sternbach, Nancy. 1991. Remembering the Dead: Latin American Women's 'Testimonial' Discourse. Latin American Perspectives:91-102.

_Sellers, Patricia Viseur. 2002. Sexual Violence and Peremptory Norms: The Legal Value of Rape. Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law 34 (3):287-304.

_Sellers, Patricia Viseur. 2004. Individual('s) Liability for Collective Sexual Violence. In Gender and Human Rights, edited by K. Knop. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.

_Sellers, Patricia Viseur. 2005. The Other Voices: Interpreters and Investigators of Sexual Violence in International Criminal Proceedings. In Listening to the Silence: Women and War, edited by H. Durham and T. Gurd. The Hague, The Netherlands: Martinus Nijhoff.

_Sellers, Patricia Viseur, and Kaoru Okuizumi. 1997. Intentional Prosecution of Sexual Assaults. Transnational Law and Contemporary Problems 7 (1):45-80.

_Spangenberg, Judora J., and Christel Pieterse. 1995. Stressful Live Events and Psychological Status in Black South African Women. Journal of Social Psychology 135 (4):439-445.

_Stephens, Beth. 1999. Humanitarian Law and Gender Violence: An End to Centuries of Neglect? Hofstra Law and Policy Symposium 3:87-110.

_Taylor, Diana. 1997. Disappearing Acts: Spectacles of Gender and Nationalism in the Argentine 'Dirty War'. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

_Tongsuthi, Janet. 1994. Comfort Women of World War II. UCLA Women's Law Journal.

_Wandita, Galuh, Karen Campbell-Nelson, and Manuela Leong Pereira. 2006. Learning to Engender Reparations in Timor-Leste: Reaching Out to Female Victims. In What Happened to the Women? Gender and Reparations for Human Rights Violations, edited by R. Rubio-Marín. New York, NY: Social Science Research Council.

_Wells, Sarah. 2005. Gender, Sexual Violence and Prospects for Justice at the Gacaca Courts in Rwanda. Southern California Review of Law and Women's Studies 14 (2):167-196.

_Women in the Law Project of the International Human Rights Law Group. 1994. No Justice, No Peace: Accountability for Rape and Gender Based Violence in the Former Yugoslavia. Hastings Women's Law Journal 5 (1):89-128.

_Yang, Hyunah. 1997. Revisiting the Issue of Korean 'Military Comfort Women': The Question of Truth and Positionality. Positions 5 (1):51-71.