Sexual assault law has been undergoing significant shifts around the
world. Traditional criminal laws against sexual assault had a narrow
scope: they targeted rape as coerced sexual intercourse, and they
defined coercion as physical violence or threats with physical
violence. Modern offense descriptions are tracing a change in the
logic and structure of criminal laws against sexual assault from the
offenders' violence to the victims' lack of consent as the key feature
of criminal wrongdoing. However, there are clear and marked
differences regarding the offence descriptions in substantive criminal
laws in various jurisdictions. Sexual Assault: Law Reform in a
Comparative Perspective provides an overview of the debates
surrounding the concept and definition of sexual consent, comparing
the context and content of law reform in six countries: Canada,
England and Wales, Germany, Sweden, the U.S. (concentrating on the
American Law Institute's Model Penal Code), and Spain. Leading
scholars in the field also analyse the normative questions that arise
once the notion of consent gains centre stage. The overall purpose is
to assess whether the new generation of criminal prohibitions reflect
coherent and convincing concepts of sexual autonomy and consent, and
what could be considered the best models for future law reform.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780192608543
Publisert
2023
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter