Global Justice Center believes that sexual and
gender-based violence is, at its core, an expression of "discrimination, patriarchy, and inequality." Therefore, its work to prevent sexual and gender-based violence seeks to address and transform these root causes and the
patriarchal legal systems that enable it.
Mass Atrocity Crimes GJC works to pressure international groups and institutions to use a
gender lens when enforcing the
Genocide Convention, arguing that current enforcement fails to adequately account for the differential experiences of women in conflict and the gender-based genocidal tactics often used in contemporary
warfare, such as
sexual slavery. Its 2018 legal analysis of gender and genocide, "Beyond Killing: Gender, Genocide and Obligations under International Law" examines non-killing acts of genocide and argues that the international community has "failed to grapple with the intrinsic role that gender plays the crime of genocide" Since its founding, GJC's work on mass atrocity crimes has focused on
Myanmar. Before and after the 2017
genocide of the Rohingya, GJC worked with
Burmese women's organizations to use international law and international standards to challenge discriminatory domestic policies and practices on sexual and gender-based violence. Following the Rohingya genocide and
2021 military coup, GJC has worked to hold Myanmar's military accountable at the International Criminal Court,
International Court of Justice, and other international venues for its crimes, which include the systemic use of sexual and gender-based violence. == References ==