Bred ‘Like Cattle’ : Forced Procreation in the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia
Access status:
Open Access
Type
ArticleAuthor/s
Grey, RosemaryAbstract
The Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) serves as a compelling case study to extend current thinking about reproductive violence in international criminal law beyond the crime of ‘forced pregnancy’. In particular, the cases and evidence from the ECCC illustrate ...
See moreThe Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) serves as a compelling case study to extend current thinking about reproductive violence in international criminal law beyond the crime of ‘forced pregnancy’. In particular, the cases and evidence from the ECCC illustrate a broader concept of forced procreation, associated with the Khmer Rouge regime’s role in forcing or coercing its citizens to produce children for the nation. Although this type of forced procreation was potentially prosecutable in the ECCC using the crimes against humanity of ‘other inhumane acts’ or ‘enslavement’, no such charges were laid. This article considers that apparent gap in the ECCC charges, drawing on Sellers’ concept of ‘absent jurisprudence’.
See less
See moreThe Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) serves as a compelling case study to extend current thinking about reproductive violence in international criminal law beyond the crime of ‘forced pregnancy’. In particular, the cases and evidence from the ECCC illustrate a broader concept of forced procreation, associated with the Khmer Rouge regime’s role in forcing or coercing its citizens to produce children for the nation. Although this type of forced procreation was potentially prosecutable in the ECCC using the crimes against humanity of ‘other inhumane acts’ or ‘enslavement’, no such charges were laid. This article considers that apparent gap in the ECCC charges, drawing on Sellers’ concept of ‘absent jurisprudence’.
See less
Date
2024Source title
Journal of human trafficking, enslavement and conflict-related sexual violenceVolume
5Issue
1Publisher
Paris Legal PublishersFunding information
ARC DE210101486Licence
OtherRights statement
Publisher has confirmed:"We offer green open access and give permission to place articles in institutional repositories. The embargo period is 6 months after publication of the issue."Faculty/School
Sydney Law SchoolShare