Shifting the Spotlight in the Law of Rape

Shifting the Spotlight in the Law of Rape

The Responsibilities of Penetration

By Jonathan Herring & Sorcha McCormack

Anthem Studies in Law Reform

Anthem Series on Women and Criminal Justice

We need a new law of rape –.   One one which puts the focus on the defendant, rather than the victim.   Many survivors of rape report that their experience of the criminal courts is that they are on trial.   This book argues we need to redefine rape so the focus is on the defendant and his responsibility.

EPUB, 150 Pages

ISBN:9781839995309

October 2025

£19.99, $23.80

PDF, 150 Pages

ISBN:9781839995316

October 2025

£19.99, $23.80

  • About This Book
  • Reviews
  • Author Information
  • Series
  • Table of Contents
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  • Podcasts

About This Book

All is not well with the law on rape. It is rarely reported and even when it is, it is rarely prosecuted. Victims are deterred for a range of reasons, but these include a fear that it will never be possible to prove the rape has occurred and that the trial will be traumatic. Even when the case proceeds to trial, victims perceive that it is they, rather than the perpetrator, who is the one on trial. The past sexual behaviour of the victim,; the clothes she was wearing,; the people she socialised with and the places she visited are all used as tools to claim that in fact the victim consented to the rape. Reforms are needed.
In this book, we explore how changing the definition of rape will help tackle some of these problems. We argue there needs to be a shift in the focus of the rape trial: away from asking whether the victim consented, to focus on whether the defendant. Rather than focusing on the way the victim dresses, behaviour in response to the rape, the focus will be on what the defendant believed justified him engaging in a sexual behaviour.
At the heart of our proposal is the claim that having sex comes with responsibilities. In particular, a responsibility to ensure you have reasonable grounds to believe the other consents. Without that consent, a very serious wrong is being done. The central legal focus should therefore be on whether the defendant had sufficiently good reasons to proceed with having sex.

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Author Information

Jonathan Herring, is a professor of law, at the University of Oxford, and DW Wolf-Clarendon Ffellow, at Exeter College, Oxford.
Sorcha McCormack, is a Senior senior Lecturer, in law at Leeds Beckett University.

Series

Anthem Studies in Law Reform

Anthem Series on Women and Criminal Justice

Table of Contents

Links

No Podcasts for this title.
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