2018
DOI: 10.1080/14616742.2018.1447311
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Conceptualizing the role of consent in the definition of rape at the international criminal court: a norm transfer perspective

Abstract: Over the past three decades' international criminal legal standards on sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) have developed rapidly, sparking debate within feminist circles over the extent to which these developments might bear relevance to domestic contexts in a process termed "norm transfer." Indeed, non-governmental organisations and feminist scholars have called for domestic adoption of the International Criminal Court (ICC) definition of rape due to its omission of the element of the absence of consent.… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Debates around sexual violence in peacetime often place consent, in particular, the lack of it, at the heart of their definitions, as a line between what is legal, moral or accepted, and what is not. In popular discourse and legal judgments, consent is the hinge around which a particular act is understood as ‘sex’ or, alternatively, as ‘violence’ (Dowds, 2018: 6). Consent thus figures as a kind of ‘dividing line’ used to distinguish ‘good’ from ‘bad’ (Wertheimer, 2003), ‘pleasurable’ from ‘unpleasurable’ (Jones, 2002), and morally acceptable from morally unacceptable and/or criminal sex, that is, rape (Hurd, 1996).…”
Section: Erasing Pleasure Cruelty and The Body? Rationality As A Conmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Debates around sexual violence in peacetime often place consent, in particular, the lack of it, at the heart of their definitions, as a line between what is legal, moral or accepted, and what is not. In popular discourse and legal judgments, consent is the hinge around which a particular act is understood as ‘sex’ or, alternatively, as ‘violence’ (Dowds, 2018: 6). Consent thus figures as a kind of ‘dividing line’ used to distinguish ‘good’ from ‘bad’ (Wertheimer, 2003), ‘pleasurable’ from ‘unpleasurable’ (Jones, 2002), and morally acceptable from morally unacceptable and/or criminal sex, that is, rape (Hurd, 1996).…”
Section: Erasing Pleasure Cruelty and The Body? Rationality As A Conmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While these debates dominate conversations about sexual violence in national contexts and domestic legislation, they appear less prevalently in discussions about wartime rape (cf. Dowds, 2018). Notably, while the role and the significance of consent has shifted across the definitions developed by and judgments passed at the ICTY, the ICTR and the ICC (Dowds, 2018; Hayes, 2010: 140–142), contemporary international rape law both requires and presumes lack of consent (Hayes, 2010: 143–144).…”
Section: Erasing Pleasure Cruelty and The Body? Rationality As A Conmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations