A master's thesis in the College of Law and Political Science discussed: The role of criminal justice in ensuring women's privacy By researcher Duha Jamal Jabbar, in Hammurabi Hall in the college
The discussion committee consisted of professors:
1. Assistant Professor Dr. Ahmed Mustafa Ali / Al-Noor University / College of Law ... Chairman
2. Assistant Professor Dr. Khalil Ibrahim Hussein / University of Kirkuk / College of Law and Political Science ... Member
3. Assistant Professor Dr. Marwan Hussein Ahmed / University of Kirkuk / College of Law and Political Science ... Member
4. Professor Dr. Yasser Muhammad Abdullah / University of Kirkuk / College of Law and Political Science ... Member and supervisor
The thesis aimed to explain the criminal justice apparatus, define criminal justice, explain its foundations and characteristics, and distinguish it from what is suspected of it, and explain some forms of crimes against women and consider all crimes as violence against them. Knowing the procedural rules and stating the guarantees of the accused in a fair trial, trying to come up with a comprehensive theory. The message concluded that there is no special law for women like there is a special law for juveniles. And that there are no special courts that specialize in women's cases related to "violence and its types. And that crimes against morality are mentioned in the Penal Code in their traditional form. And that the Iraqi Penal Code criminalizes forms of domestic violence in general texts and there is no independent article related to violence against women, especially psychological violence, which is a gateway to opening other crimes, including suicide as a result of psychological violence.