Age of consent
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This article is about the legal concept regarding sexual activity. For other uses, see Age of consent (disambiguation).
While the phrase age of consent (AoC) typically does not appear in legal statutes [1], when used with reference to criminal law the age of consent is the minimum age at which a person is considered to be capable of legally giving informed consent to any contract or behaviour regulated by law with another person. This article refers specifically to those laws regulating sexual acts. This should not be confused with the age of majority or age of criminal responsibility or the marriageable age.
The age of consent varies widely from jurisdiction to jurisdiction [1](pp.40-59). The median seems to range from fourteen to sixteen years, but laws stating ages as young as twelve and as old as twenty-one do exist. Some jurisdictions forbid sexual activity outside of legal marriage completely. The relevant age may also vary by the type of sexual act, the gender of the actors or other restrictions such as abuse of a position of trust. Some jurisdictions may also make allowances for minors engaged in sexual acts with each other rather than a hard and fast single age. Charges resulting from a breach of these laws may range from a relatively low level misdemeanour such as "corruption of a minor" to "statutory rape" (which is considered equivalent to rape, both in severity and sentencing).
There are many grey areas in this area of law, some regarding unspecific and untried legislation, others brought about by debates regarding changing societal attitudes and others due to conflicts between federal and state laws. These factors all make age of consent an often confusing subject and a topic of highly charged debates [1].
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[edit] Social attitudes
Social (and the resulting legal) attitudes toward the appropriate age of consent have drifted upwards in modern times; while ages from ten through to thirteen were typically acceptable in the mid-Nineteenth Century [1] (Pg7), fifteen through to eighteen had become the norm in many countries by the end of the Twentieth Century.
[edit] Moral philosophy
The general moral philosophy behind AoC laws is the assumed need for the protection of minors. It is a common belief in many societies that minors below a certain age lack the maturity and/or life experience to fully understand the ramifications of engaging in sexual acts. These fears may include but are not limited to resulting pregnancies and psychological or physical damage. There is an ongoing debate in many cultures regarding child sexuality as it relates to age and an appropriate age of consent [1]. It is these debates that have informed the various laws in different jurisdictions and account for their disparity. Different cultures regard minors engaging in sexual activity as anything from normal to regarding it as deviant behavior in need of correction.
[edit] Religious basis
Many legal systems refer to or are informed by the moral viewpoint of lawmakers, or refer to or appeal to cultural and religious norms. For example the Common law systems practised in the United Kingdom and its former colonies were developed in the context of Christian values and Western Philosophy. Similarly the Laws in many Muslim based countries are based on the Qur'an and the resulting Sharia. In some legal systems secular philosophies form part of the culture and likewise are part of the context in which the laws are formed, sometimes leading to changes in the law of previous periods. Difference in opinion between various religious and secular groups forms a part of the cultural context of AoC.
[edit] Law
Sexual relations with a person under the age of consent is in general a criminal offence, with punishments ranging from token fines to life imprisonment. Many different terms exist for the charges laid and include statutory rape, illegal carnal knowledge, or corruption of a minor [1].
The enforcement practises of AoC laws tend to vary depending on the social sensibilities of the particular culture (see above). Often enforcement is not exercised to the letter of the law, with legal action being taken only when a sufficiently socially-unacceptable age gap exists between the two individuals, or if the perpetrator is in a position of authority over the minor (e.g. a teacher, priest or doctor). The gender of each actor can also influence perceptions of an individual's guilt and therefore enforcement [1].
[edit] Close in age exceptions
While some legislation dealing with age of consent sets a hard and fast age under which sexual relations are prohibited, some jurisdictions have included exceptions to this. The exception can take the form of a defence at trial on the grounds of the close age of the participants, or can be an actual close in age exemption in the law negating any charges. The latter details acceptable age ranges for consensual sex between peers that otherwise would not be legal because one or both of the participants would be below the age of consent. The age differences of these two types of legislation vary by jurisdiction, from as low as one year to as high as ten years (e.g. South Australia and Colorado).
[edit] Defences
The AoC is a legal barrier to the minor being able to give consent and as such obtaining consent is not in general a defence to having sexual relations with a person under the prescribed age. However, there are some defences in some jurisdictions; common examples include;
- Limited mistake of age - Where the accused can show mistaken belief that the victim was not under the age of consent. However, where such a defence is provided, it normally applies only when the victim is close to the AoC or the accused can show due diligence in determining the age of the victim.
- Marriage - In those jurisdictions where the marriageable age is less than the age of consent.
These different defences can change dramatically from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, even between neighbouring states of the same union with the same AoC.
[edit] Extraterritoriality
Increasingly the age of consent laws of a state apply not only to acts committed on its own territory, but also acts committed by its nationals and/or inhabitants on foreign territory[1](pp.53-55). Such provisions have been frequently adopted to help reduce the incidence of child sex tourism. See the relevant sections below for discussion of laws in specific jurisdictions. (See also Universal jurisdiction; the effective age of consent may be the highest of those corresponding to the list in Applicable jurisdictions.)
[edit] Homosexual and heterosexual age discrepancies in law
Some jurisdictions have different ages of consent for heterosexual and homosexual intercourse, for example these countries that maintain a higher age of consent limit for homosexual intercourse, compared with heterosexual intercourse include the Bahamas, Chile, Indonesia, Ivory Coast, Madagascar, Niger, Portugal, Rwanda, Suriname and Vanuatu, also a few crown territories of the United Kingdom of Bermuda, Gibraltar and the Channel island of Guernsey. See [1]. While some jurisdictions outlaw homosexual intercourse altogether. These disparities are increasingly being challenged. Cases such as Lawrence v. Texas in the Supreme Court of the United States and Morris v. The United Kingdom in the European Court of Human Rights have set precedents for international law. [2] For examples in law see the articles listed under Ages of consent in various countries below.
[edit] Other concerns
[edit] Marriage
The age at which a person can be legally married can also differ from the age of consent. In some jurisdictions this can negate the age of consent laws where the marriageable age is lower than the age of consent, but in others it does not. Further still, some jurisdictions have no actual age of consent but require persons to be married before they can legally engage in sexual activity.
[edit] Prostitution
The age at which a person can engage in prostitution (if it is at all legal in a jurisdiction) is often set at the age of majority rather than at the AoC. This is possibly due to the legal nature of contract as well as moral reasons.[citation needed]
[edit] Statutory rape
Where a jurisdiction's age of consent laws for sexual activity treat those convicted of those laws with the same severity as criminal rape the law is often referred to as statutory rape. This is an emotive title to some who view the age of consent laws as lesser crimes or as no crime at all. The different titles of age of consent laws include statutory rape, rape of a child, corruption of a minor, carnal knowledge of a minor and so on. However, in the vernacular many of these terms are interchangeable and little differentiation is made.
[edit] Initiatives to change the age of consent
Age of consent reform refers to the efforts of some individuals or groups, for different reasons and with varying arguments, to raise, lower, abolish or otherwise alter age of consent laws. These efforts advocate five main positions:
- An introduction of close-in-age exemptions.
- A change in the way age of consent laws are examined in court.
- An increase in the ages of consent, more severe penalties for violation of these laws or both.
- A decrease in the ages of consent, less severe penalties for violation of these laws or both.
- To abolish the age of consent laws altogether or as a temporary practical expedient.
There is an ongoing debate over these laws. However, critics on both sides of these arguments are often arguing at cross purposes due to their differences in defining what exactly the age of consent laws are to achieve and who they are intended to protect. For example those advocating close in age exceptions may be held up by their opponents as contradicting the protective nature of the age of consent law. Historical study demonstrates that minimum age laws, which in English law originally applied only to girls, were not initially created with a rationale focussing on the competence and consent of an individual female child, but rather with a focus upon the changing physical body of a child, understood within a framework of patriarchal family property relations in which men were understood to own wives and children. [1](pp.60-67). While many contemporary commentators focus on 'consent' as the appropriate rationale for determining minimum age laws, and hence 'age of consent' laws have increasingly been perceived as representing and embodying a focus on 'consent', Matthew Waites has recently argued that this reflects a preoccupation with the individual's psychological competence and consent among legal theorists, and a lack of sociologically informed discussion and appreciation of issues of social structure. Waites argues that the rationale for minimum age laws may be more appropriately determined via analysis of the situation of young people as embodied subjects in the context of various institutional and social power relations, rather than via a focus on the understanding of these power relations by young people themselves which tends to dominate debates over such laws. [1](Chap.9).
[edit] Ages of consent in various countries
Specific jurisdictions' laws relating to Age of Consent can be found on the following pages:
[edit] Listed by geographic region
__ Africa
__ Asia
__ Australia and Pacific Region
__ Europe
__ Under the Antarctic Treaty, scientists and support staff stationed there are subject to the laws of the party of which they are nationals. Other visitors to the continent may need to follow the laws of the country in which their expedition is organised, or the country from which it departs.[3]
[edit] Notes and references
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Waites, Matthew (2005). The Age of Consent: Young People, Sexuality and Citizenship. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 1-4039-2173-3.
- ^ Legal wrap up survey. www.ilga.org (2006-07-20). Retrieved on 2006-10-21.
- ^ What is the treaty?. Australian Antarctic Division (2006-03-23). Retrieved on 2006-07-18.
[edit] Further reading
Published books on the subject:
- Waites, Matthew (2005) The Age of Consent: Young People, Sexuality and Citizenship, (New York [United States] and Houndmills, Basingstoke [United Kingdom]: Palgrave Macmillan) ISBN 1-4039-2173-3
- This is the first book-length English language study to focus on the concept of the age of consent. Chapter 3 'Age of Consent Laws in Global Perspective' provides a global survey of academic literature on age of consent laws, and comparative data on age of consent laws in states worldwide. The book also provides a unique history of age of consent laws in the United Kingdom, in-depth theoretical discussion of the rationale for age of consent laws, and a proposal to reduce the age of consent in the UK to 14 for young people who are less than two years apart in age.
Websites attempting to list the age of consent in many jurisdictions:
- Avert.org AIDS awareness organisation Chart of ages of consent around the world that welcomes sourced updates from their readers.
- Channel Four UK - Age of consent map Info on age of consent in 19 countries around the world.
- Legislation of Interpol member states on sexual offences against children (Much information out of date)
- Age of Consent The 'original' Age of consent chart. However please note that this project has not been updated since 2003 and has a lot of information that is out of date and in some cases totally wrong.
- Moral Outrage Contains links to and extracts of age of consent laws for all 50 US states and the legislative source for each.
Websites dealing specifically with homo/heterosexual law discrepancies
- Gay rights info and Homosexual rights information colated by individual Bill Myers from many sources