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Classifying Cultural and Physical Destruction: Are Modern Historical and Current Human Rights Violations in China Violations of International Criminal Law?

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Abstract

Modern (Communist) China has a chequered history with regard to the commission of and accountability for mass violence and human rights violations. Campaigns by the Communist Party have resulted in horrific mass crimes such as killings, starvation, torture, beatings, and persecution. While such conduct undoubtedly amount to violations of human rights, there are many examples from China’s recent past and in China today where situations of mass human rights violations, as well as mass atrocities, could also constitute violations of international criminal law (war crimes, crimes against humanity or genocide). This paper will assess three examples in modern China’s history and present to determine whether they amount to international crimes: the Cultural Revolution, the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre, and human trafficking (including the consequential crimes of forced marriage and forced prostitution); and offer a brief overview of what accountability steps China should take with regard to these crimes.

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Correspondence to Melanie O’Brien.

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Postdoctoral Research Fellow, TC Beirne School of Law, University of Queensland. E-mail: m.obrien@law.uq.edu.au. The research for this article was conducted through a Griffith Asia Institute Australia-China Futures Dialogues Visiting Fellowship to Peking University, China, and was written up while the author was a Research Fellow at the ARC Centre of Excellence in Policing and Security, Griffith University. Thank you to Professor Wang Shizhou for his expertise and input during the Visiting Fellowship. Thank you to Associate Professor Sue Trevaskes for her expertise, advice and feedback; and to Dr Hugh Breakey for his expertise and feedback.

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O’Brien, M. Classifying Cultural and Physical Destruction: Are Modern Historical and Current Human Rights Violations in China Violations of International Criminal Law?. Crim Law Forum 26, 533–563 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10609-015-9261-4

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10609-015-9261-4

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