Journal of East Asia and International Law
Volume 6, Issue 1, 2013, Pages 175-194

Remedying "enforced sexual slavery": Validating victims' reparation claims against Japan (Article) (Open Access)

Hong S.P.*
  • a Yonsei University, School of Law, 50 Yonsei-ro, Seodaemun-gu, Seoul 120-749, South Korea

Abstract

It has been over two decades since the Japanese practice of enforced sexual slavery began to receive widespread attention. Yet despite numerous international efforts to urge Japan to squarely acknowledge its moral and legal responsibility, there has been no meaningful progress to resolve this matter. This work revisits the issue of enforced sexual slavery as it stands today. The Japanese practice of enforced sexual slavery was a clear violation of international law at the time. Therefore, individual victims have valid legal claims for reparation against the Japanese government. The first half of this article reconfirms the illegality of the practice of enforced sexual slavery. The remainder summarizes and vindicates the claims of the victims once again. This research suggests how to remedy the victims' rights and discusses how to implement reparation. It also contends that Japan owes reparations and legitimate remedial measures to the victims that go beyond monetary compensation in line with the rules of contemporary international law. © VI JEAIL 1 (2013).

Author Keywords

Crimes against humanity Enforced sexual slaves Reparation for individual victims The 1965 Korea-Japan agreement The San Francisco peace treaty

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84879587046&doi=10.14330%2fjeail.2013.6.1.08&partnerID=40&md5=efcdf64fc642fb3f675205142c6be1fa

DOI: 10.14330/jeail.2013.6.1.08
ISSN: 19769229
Original Language: English