Criminalising Peacekeepers: Modernising National Approaches to Sexual Exploitation and Abuse

Criminalising Peacekeepers: Modernising National Approaches to Sexual Exploitation and Abuse

by Melanie O'Brien
Criminalising Peacekeepers: Modernising National Approaches to Sexual Exploitation and Abuse

Criminalising Peacekeepers: Modernising National Approaches to Sexual Exploitation and Abuse

by Melanie O'Brien

eBook1st ed. 2017 (1st ed. 2017)

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Overview

This book examines Australia’s and the United States’ ability to prosecute their peacekeepers for sexual exploitation and abuse. The United Nations has too long been plagued by sexual exploitation and abuse in some of the world’s most vulnerable communities. Discussion within United Nations’ reporting and academic scholarship focuses on policy; however, a significant concern outlined here is that peacekeepers are committing sexual offences with impunity, despite exclusive criminal jurisdiction over peacekeepers being granted to their sending states. In this original study O’Brien provides an in-depth, feminist analysis of US and Australian sexual offending law and jurisdiction over their military and military-civilian peacekeepers.  Based on timely critical analysis, this book demonstrates the limitations states face in ensuring accountability for sexual exploitation and abuse by peacekeepers – a factor which directly contributes to ongoing commission of and impunity for such offences. Calling for a rights-based, transnational law response to these crimes, this engaging and thought-provoking work will appeal to international practitioners, governments, UN policy-makers, and scholars of international, military and criminal law.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783319577296
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Publication date: 11/23/2017
Series: Transnational Crime, Crime Control and Security
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 207
File size: 350 KB

About the Author

Melanie O'Brien is a Research Fellow in the TC Beirne School of Law and researcher in the Asia-Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect, The University of Queensland, Australia. She has worked for Anti-Slavery Australia and the Office of the Prosecutor, International Criminal Court.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1. UN Peacekeepers, the Military, and Sexual Exploitation.- 1.1 The Military, Peacekeepers and Sex Trade.- 1.2 Violence against Women.- 1.3 Peacekeepers and HIV/AIDS Transmission.- 1.4 Effects on the Mission of Sexual Exploitation and Abuse by Peacekeepers.- 1.5 Reporting and Scholarship.- 1.6 Criminal Jurisdiction over Peackeepers.- 1.7 Case Studies: Australia and the United States.- 1.8 Military is a ‘Special Community’.- Chapter 2. National Criminal Jurisdiction over Australian and Us Military Personnel.- 2.1 Law Applicable to Australian Defence Force Personnel.- 2.2 Extraterritorial Jurisdiction over Australian Defence Force Personnel.- 2.3 Law Applicable to the United States Armed Forces.- 2.4 Extraterritorial Jurisdiction over the United States Armed Forces.- 2.5 Extraterritorial Jurisdiction over Civilians Accompanying or Employed by the United States Armed Forces.- Chapter 3. General Criminal Provisions of Us and Australian Military Disciplinary Law.- 3.1 Section 60 Australian Defence Force Discipline Act.- 3.2 Articles 133 and 134 of the US Uniform Code of Military Justice.- 3.2.1 Article 133 Conduct Unbecoming.- 3.2.2 Article 134 The General Article.- Chapter 4. Rape.- 4.1 Conduct.- 4.2 Consent.- 4.3 Force and Threats.- Chapter 5. Prostitution-Related Conduct.- 5.1 UCMJ Article 133.- 5.2 UCMJ Article 134.- Chapter 6. Sexual Exploitation.- Chapter 7. Human Trafficking and Sexual Slavery.- Chapter 8. Hiv/Aids-Related Offences.- 8.1 Australia.- 8.2 United States.- Chapter 9. Transnational Regulation of Peacekeeper Sexual Exploitation as Part of a Rights-Based Approach.


What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Dr. O’Brien’s book presents an excellent examination of the problem of sexual offenses being committed by international peacekeepers, and provides insightful suggestions for addressing the criminal justice aspects of that problem. Because the international organizations seem incapable of effectively stemming the problem, she suggests that the nation states providing the peacekeepers take a more aggressive approach to the problem. To that end, she addresses in detail the civil and military jurisdiction of both Australia and the United States, and in particular the various criminal and military laws that would permit those countries to investigate and prosecute alleged sexual offenses by their citizens, when serving in another country as peacekeepers.” (David A. Schlueter, Hardy Professor of Law & Director of Advocacy Programs St. Mary’s University School of Law, USA)

“This valuable book offers a bracing perspective on the vexed issue of accountability of UN peacekeepers for sexualexportation and abuse. It pinpoints the weaknesses of the current system and argues persuasively for transnational regulation, with women’s human rights at its centre.” (Professor Hilary Charlesworth, Melbourne Laureate Professor at Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne, and Distinguished Professor at the Australian National University, Australia)

“Combining deft analysis of international and domestic jurisprudence with a sound understanding of peacekeeping practices in the field and the challenges confronting the global community, this important book sheds new light on the problem of responding to sexual exploitation and abuse by UN peacekeepers. It offers careful and balanced analysis as well as a set of practical steps that could be taken to prevent abuse by holding perpetrators accountable. This book will be welcomed and must be read by both general readers and those that have grappled – thus far unsuccessfully – with this issue for years.” (Professor Alex Bellamy, Director of the Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect and Professor of Peace and Conflict Studies at The University of Queensland, Australia; Non-Resident Senior Adviser at the International Peace Institute, New York, USA, and Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia)

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