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    The Riddle of Rape-by-Deception and the Myth of Sexual Autonomy

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    Author
    Rubenfeld, Jed
    
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    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13051/4879
    Abstract
    "Rape-by-deception" is almost universally rejected in American criminal law. But if rape is sex without the victim's consent-as many courts, state statutes, and scholars say it is-then sex-by-deception ought to be rape, because as courts have held for a hundred years in virtually every area of the law outside of rape, a consent procured through deception is no consent at all. Moreover, rejecting rape-by-deception fails to vindicate sexual autonomy, which is widely viewed today as rape law's central principle and, indeed, as a constitutional right. This Article argues against the idea of sexual autonomy and against the understanding of rape as unconsented-to sex. A better understanding, it is argued, can be arrived at by comparing rape to slavery and torture, which are violations of a person's fundamental right to self-possession. This view of rape can explain the rejection of rape-by-deception, which current thinking cannot, but it will also suggest that rape law's much-maligned force requirement may not be so malign after all.
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