Publications
REDRESS’ publications are also available in hard copy format. Please contact us for further information on [email protected].
Until recently, international criminal courts and tribunals established since Nuremberg have given only sparse consideration to victims’ views and concerns and limited space for their active engagement with such institutions beyond the role of prosecution witness. The focus of this report is victim participation in international criminal justice processes and the array of measures that have been put in place by the Rome Statute system and the jurisprudence of the International Criminal Court.
Sexual violence is the most pervasive form of violence in many of the conflict-ridden countries in Africa and continues to remain so. The overall purpose of this manual is to eliminate the knowledge gap about strategies women may adopt to seek justice for sexual violence. It is also to encourage women to use and exhaust avenue of justice within their domestic legal system and, if the systems fail them to explore brining complains under regional or international mechanisms. This manual examines the different legal options available to a victim/survivor of sexual violence or rights group on her behalf.
This report builds on the presentations and discussions held at an expert meeting on the law and practice on torture in Europe organised by REDRESS and the European Centre for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR) in Berlin on 25-27 November 2011.
The meeting brought together experts from Armenia, Belgium, Croatia, Cyprus, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Russia, Spain, Ukraine, and United Kingdom and provided an opportunity to exchange information and experiences on litigating torture cases and advocating legal and institutional reforms.
The report provides a review of laws, practices and patterns of torture, examining the availability and effectiveness of safeguards, accountability mechanisms and avenues to obtain reparation for torture in the countries considered. It reflects both systemic challenges and best practices identified by the participants in respect of key areas of concern.
Every year, British nationals and residents are arrested, detained and imprisoned abroad. Some of these individuals are ill-treated or tortured in detention. This report examines the law, policy and practice of British consular assistance and diplomatic protection. It mainly considers the UK’s obligations to British nationals abroad under the United Nations Convention against Torture (UNCAT) and the UK government’s policies and practice in relation to this matter.