Abstract: Conflict-related Sexual Violence (CRSV) continues to be used in conflicts despite the existing international law prohibitions contained in the Rome Statute of the ICC and other international agreements. Given the continued violations of these prohibitions, more needs to be done to prevent instances of CRSV and increase prosecutions of perpetrators. This paper focuses specifically on CRSV against women. Through examples of conflicts with varying amounts of CRSV and the enforcement measures taken, this paper argues that the current ICC framework is ineffective and incomplete. This paper proposes three potential improvements the UNSC could make in treating CRSV to demonstrate its expressed commitment to eliminating CRSV and holding perpetrators responsible. 1) the UNSC could grant broader jurisdiction to prosecute sexual violence. In the alternative, 2) the UNSC could establish an automatic determination function for itself in referring instances of CRSV to the ICC under Chapter VII, and 3) the UNSC could authorize universal jurisdiction to domestic courts under Chapter VII so that any jurisdiction can prosecute CRSV.