Survivor-Centered Approaches to Conflict-Related Sexual Violence in International Humanitarian and Human Rights Law

Kyriakides, Klearchos orcid iconORCID: 0000-0003-3457-7740 and Demetriades, Andreas .K (2022) Survivor-Centered Approaches to Conflict-Related Sexual Violence in International Humanitarian and Human Rights Law. AMA journal of ethics, 24 (6). E495-517. ISSN 2376-6980

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Digital ID: http://doi.org/10.1001/amajethics.2022.495

Abstract

This article outlines the history of international humanitarian law conflict-related sexual violence (CRSV) from the promulgation of the Lieber Code in 1863 until the adoption in 2019 of United Nations Security Council Resolution 2467. This article considers how a survivor-centered approach to CRSV has emerged, particularly since 2008. The authors identify 3 significant clinical, ethical, and legal lessons: (1) international humanitarian law, as articulated in the Geneva Conventions and other legal instruments, requires clinicians to adopt a holistic approach to care; (2) during or after any conflict in which CRSV has allegedly been inflicted, a clinician may be required to provide evidence to an official investigatory body or court; and (3) infliction of rape in any conflict may equate to commission of torture and possibly genocide, a reality which obliges every clinician to appreciate that a patient may simultaneously be a victim of human rights violations and of crimes. [Abstract copyright: Copyright 2022 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.]


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