A. Introduction
#MeToo. “El violador eres tu (The rapist is you).” #IBelieveWomen. #balancetonporc (#RatOutYourPig). “#米兔 (literal translation: Rice Bunny, phonetic: Me Too). “Consent is king.” #ЯHеБоюсьСказать (#IAmNotAfraidToSpeak). #WhyIDidntReport. “No means no.” #ANAKAM (#MeToo). #YesAllWomen. #Akademiuppropet (#AppealToAcademia). #MyDressMyChoice. #QuellaVoltaChe (#ThatTimeWhen). “If it’s not a yes, it’s a no.” #Aufschrei (#Outcry). #TimesUp.
These are examples of some of the most prominent hashtags and slogans seen on social media platforms and protest banners all over the world during recent years. In fact, it seems that very few legal topics have received as much attention—particularly outside the legal community—as crimes of sexual violence. The discussions surrounding these hashtags and slogans have brought to light mainly three things. First, they have demonstrated how widespread the experience of sexual violence is.Footnote 1 Second, they have prompted the public to reconsider which kinds of behaviors constitute a violation of a person’s sexual autonomy.Footnote 2 Third, the hashtags can be seen as evidence of the increasing frustration of those affected by sexual violence with the response, or lack thereof by, societies, legislators, and courts.Footnote 3
As the examples given above show, the #MeToo movement is the most prominent but by no means only example. Building on older initiatives—in particular by activist and community organizer Tarana Burke—actress Alyssa Milano took the allegations against film producer Harvey Weinstein as an opportunity to urge victims of all forms of sexual violence to use the hashtag #Metoo to come forward.Footnote 4 Other hashtags followed and older online initiatives against sexual violence gained momentum as a result. Often times, these campaigns have led to calls for criminalization or harsher penalties.Footnote 5
In some countries, such as India or Spain, particularly grave individual incidents of sexual violence sparked large-scale online and offline protests and led to a renewal of long-standing demands for a reform of the criminal law provisions on sexual violence. Not least because of the political pressure stemming from a mass mobilization on social media, the demands were finally heard and ultimately resulted in legislative changes in both countries.Footnote 6
These developments can be viewed as a form of digital grassroots activism, where the political agenda is no longer set exclusively by institutionalized actors such as political parties and organizations, but by short-term occasional coalitions of individual activists and civil society actors who mobilize by means of social media and can thereby exert considerable political influence.Footnote 7
Yet the debates surrounding these different movements and initiatives have also triggered controversial discussions on the suitability of criminal law to respond to sexual violence—in particular when taking into account victims’ interests.Footnote 8 From a feminist perspective, the question comes to mind as to whether the master’s tools really will dismantle the master’s house.Footnote 9 Or are the attempts to use criminal law in an emancipatory manner doomed to fail because they are ultimately perpetuating institutions and processes that are themselves products of the same hegemonic structures that produce gendered sexual violence?Footnote 10
I. The New Paradigm of Consent
On a broader level, all of these discussions mirror important changes in the perception of the right to sexual autonomy and its legal protection. Over the last decades, societal conceptions of sexuality have moved away from collective determinations of morality and decency towards individual sexual autonomy.Footnote 11 These developments, together with fundamental shifts in our awareness of gendered power hierarchies in societies, have led to an understanding that the legal regulation of sexuality should be based on the idea of consent.Footnote 12
In the area of international human rights law, the paradigm of consent is now enshrined in the Council of Europe Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence against Women and Domestic Violence—the so-called “Istanbul Convention”—which requires member states to ensure that “non-consensual acts of a sexual nature” are criminalized.Footnote 13 As a result, numerous states have recently moved away from the requirement of force or threat and introduced a consent-based sexual offense model. While some states, such as Germany, have introduced a “No means No” approach,Footnote 14 others, such as Sweden, have gone a step further and implemented an affirmative consent based “Only Yes means Yes” approach.Footnote 15
These legislative changes, praised and celebrated by many feminist lawyers and human rights activists, have also caused controversial debates on over-criminalization and “carceral feminism” in academic as well as public discussions.Footnote 16 Furthermore, these international developments have also been met with stark political resistance and caused destructive backlash, as the recent withdrawal of Turkey from the Istanbul Convention demonstrates.Footnote 17
The laws on sexual offenses have become a highly symbolic field of socio-political debate. The idea that it is merely a question of legal-technical expertise and the correct formulation of laws, though comfortable to many lawyers, clearly turns out to be an illusion. In our view, the debate ultimately concerns questions around the negotiation, and re-negotiation, of gendered power hierarchies in society.
II. The Non-Physical Dimension of Sexual Autonomy
While digitalization has without a doubt boosted various forms of activism relating to accountability for sexual violence and criminal justice reform, it has also enabled new forms of violations of sexual autonomy occurring in the virtual sphere.Footnote 18 Examples include the distribution of various forms of image-based sexual abuse, such as “revenge porn.”Footnote 19 In many countries, these behaviors are not criminally sanctioned or at least not as sexual offenses. This finding—again—led to increasing demands for criminalization. Recent examples of criminal law reforms triggered by such demands include revenge porn in AustraliaFootnote 20 and “upskirting” in Germany.Footnote 21 In addition, there are ongoing legislative proceedings aimed at criminalizing “dick pics” and other forms of non-consensual sexting in Finland.Footnote 22
These developments have not only raised contentious debates on the need for further criminalization but also on the scope of sexual autonomy, moving away from an exclusively physical concept. The increasing sensitization for the non-physical dimensions of the right to sexual autonomy is also evident in the ongoing discussions about verbal forms of sexual harassment, especially so-called catcalling. Amendments to the criminal law prohibiting verbal sexual harassment have already been passed in France,Footnote 23 while the need for such legislative changes is currently being vividly debated in other countries, such as the U.K. and Germany.Footnote 24
B. Overview of the Special Issue
We started working on this Special Issue with these observations in mind. Our aim was to provide a multifaceted picture of what we view as the central discussions in the area of sexual violence and criminal justice. We did not want to limit this discussion to academic voices, but also include voices from practice and persons who see themselves as activists. Neither did we want to focus exclusively on criminal law approaches, but also take into consideration analyses from a constitutional law and human rights or gender studies and sexology perspective. Further, we decided not only to cover voices in favor of the reforms of sexual offenses and those who call for further adjustments of the criminal law in the interest of a comprehensive protection of sexual autonomy, but also those who are highly critical with regard to the alleged gaps in protection and the demands for reforms and who view these calls as overestimating the positive effects of criminal law. And lastly, we of course did not want to reduce our analysis of the core issues of sexual violence and criminal justice to perspectives from Germany or even from the Global North.
At the same time, we were aware that we were pursuing an ideal that—in particular within the limits of a Special Issue—could only be partially and incompletely realized. Of course, many questions are not addressed in this issue and perspectives and voices are missing. To name just one void that we find particularly regretful: We are missing a contribution on legal approaches to dealing with sexual violence that go beyond criminal law and which do not follow the grammar of retributive justice but try to live up to an ideal of restorative or transformative justice. Unfortunately, our efforts to find authors for such a contribution were ultimately unsuccessful.Footnote 25 Furthermore, we consciously decided against including the topic of sexual violence against children as the discussion revolves around fundamentally different questions which would go beyond the scope of the Special Issue as we imagined it.
Additionally, despite all efforts to create a diverse and multifaceted picture, we cannot and do not want to claim that even the perspectives included in this issue are represented equally. It remains a highly subjective selection that reflects our own interests, viewpoints and origins in many ways—both with regard to the topics dealt with as well as the contributing authors. The picture our Special Issues paints of sexual violence and criminal justice in the 21st century is therefore unmistakably drawn from a legal, specifically a criminal law perspective, which also remains a predominantly German, white, and academic perspective. Further, our selection reveals something else: In the spectrum of the—often times extremely controversial—discussions concerning the need for an improved protection from sexual violence through new or reformed criminal offenses, we find ourselves in the camp of those who consider the demands for reforms and the developments in this regard to be in principle justified. Despite all the skepticism and reluctance which we share with regard to the effects of a criminal law approach, we do not want to categorically distance ourselves from this instrument. The premise assumed in most of the contributions is that criminal law can be used in a self-aware critical manner to challenge structural power asymmetries. Moreover, we are even convinced that this is necessary if the equal protection of the right to sexual autonomy is to be guaranteed. As long as a criminal prohibition remains the central legal means by which a society expresses that a certain behavior is considered an intolerable violation of the rights of others, it is difficult in our view to justify a more skeptical approach towards criminal justice when it comes to violations of the right to sexual autonomy as compared to other rights. We realize of course that we are speaking from our perspective as German criminal law scholars with a criminal justice system in mind that—despite all its flaws—we do not deem to be beyond repair.
Nonetheless, we are aware that the belief in the possibility and the benefits of such a progressive use of criminal law cannot be taken for granted. For many, the term “progressive criminal law” may already serve as an expression of a dangerous, moralizing, illiberal politicization of law.Footnote 26 Likewise, it may be considered unacademic to speak of a “belief” in this respect instead of citing normative or empirical arguments for or against the possibility or the benefit of such an approach. For now, we will have to accept this criticism as this introductory Article is not the appropriate place to justify these premises; at this point it only seems necessary to us to name them.
We have divided the Special Issue into four sections: Defining Sexual Autonomy and the Consent Paradigm (I.), Sexual Autonomy and the Limits of Criminal Justice (II.), Social Movements and their Influence on Sexual Violence and Criminal Justice (III.), Sexual Violence in International Criminal Law (IV). Below we will introduce our main thoughts and question behind each of these sections as well as the contributions in it.
I. Defining Sexual Autonomy and the Consent Paradigm
All recent law reform processes regarding acts of sexual violence are intended to ensure the protection of sexual autonomy. But what is sexual autonomy? A common answer would probably be that it entails the right to engage in consensual sexual acts and to be free from non-consensual acts.Footnote 27 But this seemingly easy answer quickly leads to a number of other intricate questions: What does consent mean? Does it require the victim to say “no” or the perpetrator to wait for a “yes”? What about persons who are deemed unable to consent due to constitutive deficits—are they excluded from a self-determined expression of sexuality? Are there situational or structural contexts in which it is impossible to speak of consent? Do these contexts include all forms of dependency or unequal power relations between the people concerned, such as the existence of professional hierarchical relationships? Does the consent paradigm leave room for the design of sexual contacts that appear abnormal, repulsive, or degrading from the perspective of a heteronormative or even a decidedly feminist perspective?Footnote 28 Is there a danger that the consent paradigm will possibly lead to a juridification of sexuality, which in turn becomes an impairment to a subjectively fulfilling sex life of all persons involved?Footnote 29 Does the consent paradigm perhaps impose a form of rationality in an area that was previously considered to be decidedly remote from rationality, even a reserve of sensual and impulsive experiences? In other words, is there a possibility that the consent paradigm turns against itself and exhibits paternalistic features threatening individual freedom?
The three contributions in the first section of the Special Issue tackles these questions of sexual autonomy and consent from three different angles.
In the first Article of this section, Dana-Sophia Valentiner explores “The Human Right to Sexual Autonomy.” She shows how the beforementioned paradigm shift from ideas of decency towards concepts such as autonomy and consent posed challenges for the law on various levels. At the core of her analysis lies the idea that an autonomy-based understanding of self-determination requires more than just the state-guaranteed protection from sexual violence, coercion, and discrimination. In order to protect the right to control one’s own body as well as to control the involvement in sexual interactions with others, states are obliged to take measures that protect the preconditions for exercising self-determination. According to Valentiner, this requires, in particular, sexual education measures and reliable access to information and medical services.
In the second contribution, Rona Torenz discusses “The Politics of Affirmative Consent” from a gender and sexuality studies perspective. As Torenz delineates, the introduction of the “No means No” standard in the German penal code in 2016 was welcomed by many sides as a consistent implementation of feminist demands and thus of the right to sexual autonomy. Yet, since the early 1990s at the latest, the concept of “No means No” has been further developed in the direction of an “only Yes means Yes” approach. In contrast to “No means No,” which defines the circumstances under which sex should be criminalized as sexual violence and leaves open what “morally correct” sex could look like, “Yes means Yes” makes positive statements about what “good” sex should contain. The affirmative consent approach relies on a contract-like model of negotiation in sex and thus implicitly devalues other forms of sexuality. As Torenz argues, affirmative consent is primarily considered as a social discourse and a result of cultural as well as social practices, which produce knowledge within existing power relations. This knowledge can have stabilizing and/or transformative effects on these power relations. Therefore, affirmative consent as a critical discourse can reproduce heteronormative notions of sexuality and gender.
In the last contribution of the section entitled “’Sex Must Be Voluntary’: Sexual Communication and the New Definition of Rape in Sweden,” Linnea Wegerstad takes a closer look at the legal situation in Sweden, where rape was redefined based on the criterion of nonvoluntary participation in 2018. This development forms part of a larger global trend of replacing outdated sex offense regulations with laws that accurately correspond to late modern ideas about gender equality, sexual self-determination, and consensual sex. The Article analyzes the representation of rape in the new law and in the legal discourse in Sweden and demonstrates that rape is represented as a matter of choice and communication in sexual situations. Wegerstad argues that the new rape law poses problems with regard to sexual communication and gray zones in sexual encounters. She suggests that in order to understand this new representation of rape, further exploration is necessary both into the effects of sexual violence being framed as a matter of individual choice, consent, and communication in late modernity and into the role of criminal law in an era of thin normativity. The Article concludes that the new rape law sends a clear message about what sex should be—namely, voluntary—but does not accurately describe the crime and the behavior that deserves criminal censure.
II. Sexual Autonomy and the Limits of Criminal Justice
A clear understanding of what sexual autonomy entails forms the basis of a consistent understanding of the kinds of behaviors that violate or endanger sexual autonomy. In the traditional understanding, sexual offences required an act of force or threat. A view that is consistently oriented towards sexual autonomy, on the other hand, is able to recognize the violating dimension of other behaviors, such as deceptions in the context of sexual contacts or verbal sexual attacks. Furthermore, in the age of digitalization, new forms of sexual violence have emerged and gained increasing practical relevance. The phenomenon of “revenge porn” and other image-based forms of sexual abuse serve as examples. This raises a number of important questions around the conceptualization of sexual autonomy in non-physical terms.
At the same time, it is questionable whether the purpose of criminal law is to criminalize all such violations and endangerments. Rather, it is actually a hallmark of liberal criminal law that not all interpersonal violations and threats to the law are sanctioned with the “last resort” of criminal justice, but that, in minor cases, other legal and extra-legal conflict resolution mechanisms take effect. This raises the question as to the existence of gaps in protection that make legislative action necessary. The debate around the limits of the protection of sexual autonomy through criminal law is extremely controversial. It is a discussion in which fundamental questions of criminal law theories are renegotiated under specific circumstances: What is the purpose of criminal law? Is it legitimate to create criminal offences whose function is essentially limited to symbolism? Can criminal law be an instrument of progressive social developments or must it be limited to building on the existing social conventions of the population?
Finally, the limits of a criminal justice response to sexual violence are particularly apparent when looking at the experiences of victims during criminal proceedings. Despite the fact that there have been substantial improvements in the last decades, this remains a key area of critique. In recent times, human rights conventions and international treaties have created incentives and obligations to recognize victims’ rights, which have subsequently been incorporated into national criminal procedural law.Footnote 30 Yet, the adjustment of criminal procedural law to the rights and interests of victims has also been subject to stark criticism. Critics raise the question as to whether this development does not inevitably jeopardize the painstakingly acquired balance between the interests of the legal community in the effective investigation and punishment of criminal offenses on the one hand and the interests of the accused on the other.Footnote 31
The contributions in this section seek to address these challenging questions regarding the limits of criminal justice.
In the first contribution, Beatriz Correa Camargo and Joachim Renzikowski, explore “The Concept of an ‘Act of a Sexual Nature’ in the Criminal Law.” As the authors demonstrate, all jurisdictions assume a concept of an act of a sexual nature by regulating sexual crimes. Until the sex revolution and feminist movements for equality in sexual relations, criminal law was mostly concerned with specific types of sexual acts, particularly non-marital sexual intercourse. With the paradigm shift of recent years, criminalization tends to embrace all acts of a sexual nature with another person without her valid consent. Whether the law contains a definition of a sexual act or not, borderline cases show that neither merely objective criteria nor purely subjective elements can serve as basis for the description of the conduct under prohibition. The authors hence try to overcome this deficit in the criminal law theory. They argue that sexual acts should not be understood through the metaphor of a “picture,” as German legal scholars believe, but with the metaphor of a script played out by an actor, as sexual theorists put it.
In the following contribution, Nora Scheidegger takes a look at the question of “Balancing Sexual Autonomy, Responsibility, and the Right to Privacy: Principles for Criminalizing Sex by Deception.” She argues that due to the reconceptualization of rape and other sexual offenses as violations of a person’s sexual autonomy, consent has replaced the element of force as the focal point of rape law. This shift to a consent model has prompted heated discussions about the scope of sexual autonomy and the problem of “rape by deception” in legal scholarship. Most theorists of consent argue that certain forms of deception invalidate any token of consent in the same way as forcible sexual contact. However, there is also a widely shared concern that criminalizing sex-by-deception poses serious problems in terms of drawing the line between deceptions that violate sexual autonomy and deceptions that do not. Scheidegger offers an account of principles that should be considered when examining legal cases related to sex-by-deception. These principles are examined and articulated in a way that strike a balance between responsibility, autonomy, and other principles and rights, such as the right to privacy.
Subsequently, Kim Barker and Olga Jurasz, analyze the phenomenon of “Sexual Violence in the Digital Age” and pose the question as to whether this constitutes a criminal law conundrum. The authors note that the emergence of new interactions, notably those online, has led to the parallel development of criminal behaviors—not all of which are captured by the current legal framework. They thus address the challenge posed to criminal law by the emergence of technologically facilitated violence, specifically its sexualized online forms. Barker and Jurasz draw upon—contentious—national examples of attempts to regulate disruptive sexual violence perpetrated through digital means, with particular attention being given to provisions in the UK, Germany, and France. They argue for cautious yet specific criminalization of violent behaviors online whilst considering the broader criminal liabilities of all actors involved in the facilitation and perpetration of digital sexual violence.
In the last Article of this section, Anne-Katrin Wolf and Maja Werner turn towards criminal procedural law in their contribution on “Victims’ Rights Looking Good on Paper: How Criminal Prosecution in Germany Fails Victims of Sexual Violence.” As the authors argue, whether in Germany or abroad, victims of sexual violence typically played only a minor part in criminal proceedings, serving primarily as witnesses. This led to victim disempowerment and a paternalistic method of state protection of victims. Yet, during the last decades, this perception underwent major changes in many European legal systems, owing to a rising awareness of victims’ needs, especially in cases of sexual violence. International and European conventions and treaties played a major role in this development by establishing an international regulatory framework. To implement these international standards, domestic criminal laws have changed significantly on both the substantive as well as the procedural level. Today, Germany’s criminal procedural law contains many mechanisms for protecting victims. Nevertheless, in cases of sexual violence, the implementation of these mechanisms leaves much to desire due to the effect of gender-stereotypes and rape myths. This leads Wolf and Werner to conclude that in sexual violence cases, the law in action ultimately fails to meet the international requirements.
III. Social Movements and their Influence on Sexual Violence and Criminal Justice
A particularly interesting development concerns the influence of social movements and digital forms of activism on the recent reforms of sexual offences in different countries. The demands for the elimination of gaps in legal protection and changes in applying these laws are not new. However, they are now being voiced on social media platforms and met with such a high level of public recognition and approval that they can no longer be ignored by the executive and legislative branch. As has been elaborated above, these forms of activism have served as an influential tool in drawing attention to the fact that violations of sexual autonomy are ubiquitous while highlighting the shortcomings of criminal justice systems in addressing such violations. Nonetheless, some argue that these movements embody a type of “carceral feminism” ill-suited to address the structural discrimination against women in our societies.
It is also noteworthy that in various countries, these movements were triggered by individual crimes which were used to highlight structural problems in the society and the judiciary: The keywords Harvey Weinstein, New Year’s Eve in Cologne, La Manada (Wolfpack) Case, and Nirbhaya Case stand for these individual cases leading to a mobilization of various and quite heterogeneous social actors who were able to create a breakthrough moment in social and criminal law policy.
This poses a number of important questions: Why was the mobilization so successful in these cases? How can and should the effect of these forms of activism on criminal law and criminal justice practice be assessed? Can they be understood as emancipatory forms of participation in legislative reforms in democratic states? Can categories of critical criminology such as moral entrepreneurs and moral panic help to understand these developments or do they form part of a hetero-masculine discourse of delegitimization?
The contributions in this section aim to tackle these questions surrounding social movements and their influence on criminal justice reform in the area of sexual violence from very different perspectives.
In the first contribution entitled “‘Progressive’ Criminalization? A Sociological and Criminological Analysis of the German ‘No Means No’ Model,” Ralf Kölbel analyzes the developments that led to the reform of the sexual offenses provisions in the German Penal Code from a criminological perspective. He argues that feminist activists, in close collaboration with some criminal law scholars, managed to take advantage of the mass media scandal of the events of New Year’s Eve in Cologne in 2015-16 to achieve the implementation of the “no means no” model in Germany. The deficits of the previous laws, repeatedly asserted by the same actors, could hardly have been proven with sober empirical and sociological consideration. The first statistical surveys on criminal justice activities in the area of sexual offenses since the reform also showed that despite being hailed as a milestone, it had brought far fewer practical changes and improvements than its advocates had promised. A belief in progressive criminal law that is disconnected from these criminological findings appears to be very problematic to Kölbel. His contribution can be viewed as representative of an influential strand of critique in Germany, which accuses the activists calling for reforms of the laws on sexual violence of too carelessly placing their hopes in a criminal justice approach.Footnote 32
In the second contribution “Evaluating #MeToo: The Perspective of Criminal Law Theory,” Tatjana Hörnle takes a closer look at the #MeToo movement. In doing so, she notes not only positive effects but asserts some quite problematic features of the mobilization triggered via social media. In particular, she emphasizes that these movements can, through their spread and reach, achieve exclusionary effects that have a similarly drastic affect on the denounced individuals’ lives as state penalties. The problem, however, is that there are no comparable standards of due diligence for reviewing allegations before “imposing” such informal sanctions. In addition, the alleged perpetrators usually have little opportunity to defend themselves against the allegations. In these conflicts of interpretation, which are primarily carried out via social media, there is no accepted authority whose task it is to come to a neutral, balanced judgment on a matter of fact. Rather, an emotionalized partiality dominates.
Similarly, the reform of the criminal provisions on sexual offenses in Spain cannot be understood without taking into account the mobilization of broad sections of the population with the help of social media. In her contribution on “The Wolf-Pack Case and the Reform of Sex Crimes in Spain,” Patricia Faraldo Cabana analyzes how the Manada Case became a symbol of existing social and legal problems and at the same time a transformative moment for feminism in Spain. Moreover, her contribution shows the emotional significance that seemingly technical distinctions in sexual criminal law can acquire with regard to their social reception. A fundamental point of concern that led to mass protests was that the perpetrators in the Manada Case were only convicted of sexual assault, but not of rape, by the court of first instance. Regardless of the sentence of imprisonment imposed on the main perpetrators—which was actually quite considerable from a comparative law perspective—this legal assessment was seen as an exemplary reflection of the sexist and victim-delegitimizing interpretation of cases of sexual violence.
In the last contribution of this section entitled “Between Sexual Violence and Autonomy: Rethinking engagement of Indian Women’s Movement with Criminal Law,” Awantika Tiwari and Kalika Mehta turn towards India. They analyze how a very drastic case of sexual violence in 2012 became the starting point for large-scale protests and vocal calls for reforms of the sexual assault laws as well as the criminal justice system’s response to sexual violence. Yet, the disillusionment that Indian activists subsequently experienced also becomes very clear in this contribution: From the reduction of the actual demands in the legislative process to the distortion of the legislative regulation in criminal justice practice—most hopes that the reform would become a crucial factor with regard to more fundamental change in gender relations and the protection of women’s sexual autonomy in Indian society seem to have been disappointed for the time being. The authors therefore emphasize the importance of framing sexual violence not only as a criminal wrong for which individuals have to be held responsible, but as the result of social inequality and injustice that needs to be addressed in other ways.
IV. Sexual Violence in International Criminal Law
Lastly, an analysis of sexual violence and criminal justice in the 21st century would be incomplete without taking a look at the developments in international criminal law:
It is clear that sexual violence is a constant feature of armed conflicts. For a long time, it was viewed as an unfortunate yet unavoidable by-product of war. Today, the dominant understanding of conflict-related sexualized violence is the “weapon of war” narrative: Sexualized violence during conflict is employed strategically by rational actors.Footnote 33 The change in our conceptual understanding of wartime sexualized violence goes along with another answer to this phenomenon: Importance is now increasingly placed on criminal accountability and the symbolic expressive function of a criminal sentence imposed on individuals responsible for sexual violence as a crime under international law. It is argued that a criminal conviction is necessary to make it unequivocally clear that such acts are a grave injustice that cannot be justified under any circumstances.
Since its creation, the International Criminal Court (ICC) has sparked great hopes for an internationally visible, game-changing path towards accountability for crimes of sexual violence in conflict situations. The ICC has often been lauded for its broad inclusion of sexual and gender-based violence as crimes under international law. Yet despite its robust legal framework, the actual enforcement of these provisions has—at least initially—been a source of disappointment for many observers.Footnote 34 The recent convictions in the cases Ntaganda and Ongwen shine a more promising light.Footnote 35
In her contribution on “The International Criminal Court and Sexual Violence: Between Aspirations and Reality,” Tanja Altunjan describes this path from great expectations to great disillusions but also recent rays of hope. She also analyzes how the ICC dealt with these setbacks and the criticism of its work and argues that the office of the prosecutor as well as the court have proven themselves to be learning institutions. In recent years, improvements in the prosecution of gender-based and sexual violence in conflict contexts can be witnessed at various levels. As a result, the gap between aspirations and reality has become smaller. However, for the future, Altunjan warns that a more comprehensive understanding of the nature of crimes violating the right to sexual autonomy is required.
Another means to address the problem of wartime sexualized violence is the principle of universal jurisdiction—specifically, the use of national criminal jurisdictions for the prosecution of crimes under international law including sexual violence. But here, too, the first trials have been a challenging experience: In general, third countries are very reluctant when it comes to prosecutions based on the universality principle but even where such criminal proceedings have taken place, sexual violence has only played a subordinate role, at least in legal terms. Why is that the case? And what can be done to overcome these deficits? Alexandra Lily Kather and Silke Studzinsky address these questions in their Article “Will Universal Jurisdiction Advance Accountability for Conflict-Related Sexualized Violence? A View from Within on Progress and Challenges in Germany.” The Article is based on their professional experiences working as lawyers and activists towards accountability for sexualized and gender-based crimes under international law. The authors share their—sobering—observations of a trial involving crimes committed by the Forces Démocratiques de Libération du Rwanda (FDLR) militia in the Kivu region of the Democratic Republic of the Congo,Footnote 36 as well as trials involving crimes in Syrian torture prisons.Footnote 37 The German criminal justice system evidently shows difficulties similar to those of the ICC in the first ten years of its activity in dealing with conflict-related sexual violence and the victims of such crimes. The decentralized organization of the judicial processing of such crimes also seems to make institutional learning processes more difficult. Yet, Studzinsky and Kather also identify some advances in the German criminal justice system in the latest developments in the Syria proceedings.
II. Outlook
Our hope is that this Special Issue will serve as a starting point for an intensified transnational and interdisciplinary dialogue on sexual violence and criminal justice between academics, practitioners, and activists. One aspect that we are still grappling with are the limitations of our belief in the emancipatory potential of a criminal justice response to gendered violence. Under which conditions can such a belief be considered as justified? It seems to us that this question can only be answered on a case-by-case basis as it is contingent upon the design of the given criminal justice system as well as societal conditions. Relevant questions in this regard include: Is there an independent judiciary? Are the rights of the accused sufficiently guaranteed in the legal system and in practice? Are the penalties proportionate? How about law enforcement officials and the prison system, are there measure in place to ensure that they are not shaped by racialized biases and other discriminatory practices? And is there a critical media landscape that can expose and scandalize miscarriages of justice? The aim is not to conceptualize the ideal conditions for a utopian model of criminal justice, but to formulate realistic requirements for specific criminal justice systems under which it is generally acceptable to use criminal law to communicate central societal values while keeping in mind the overriding questions on socio-political power relations. We are convinced that a dialogue on these questions is central in order to understand and evaluate the different criminal policy demands in the area of sexual violence and criminal justice. With this in mind, we want to thank the authors of this Special Issue for sharing their perspectives and for the extremely enriching exchanges so far and hope that we will be able to continue and expand this conversation.