Abstract

In the Fall of 1995, I was seconded to the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague by the US-based non-governmental organiza tion, Physicians for Human Rights. In this capacity, I worked for the next two years for the ICTY s Sexual Assault Investigation team, where I analysed hundreds of cases of sexual assault that were committed in a conflict that has since become synonymous with the use of mass sexual assault as a weapon of war. It is from that experience that this current article arises.

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