Subject: Discussion List for campus-based and allied personnel working to end gender-based violence on campus.
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- Subject: sexual assault policies
- Date: Mon, 20 Dec 2010 14:18:36 -0500
Adale I agree with Mahri and strongly urge you not to use "intentional" and "unintentional" for many reasons.First - rape is not a specific intent crime. It is defined by the lack of consent which is exclusively concerned with ONLY the mindset of the victim. To indulge an offender state of mind is to suggest that the mistaken mindset of an offender is more important than the ACTUAL mindset of therecipient of harm. This "trade-off" view, in turn, implies that women do not enjoy 100% authority over their bodies - and that they ONLY havea right to decide what happens TO THE EXTENT their choice is not offset by a man's "mistake'.Second - It dangerously opens the door to impunity for offenders who hunt for incapacitated victims. Any case where a victim is drunkis potentially a case where the perpetrator escapes responsibility by simply arguing that her drinking made her sexually aggressive - thus, he THOUGH she was consenting. The rule should be clear that incapacitation is a VULNERABILITY for a victim - not a LIABILITY.And anyone who takes advantage of a vulnerability gets EXTRA punishment - not a discount!The approach should be "buyer-beware" in nature - which means - a mistake MIGHT not be offensive/criminal, etc - but the harmdoer bears the risk he might be wrong. I also urge you NOT to adopt a two-tiered approach. Brett referred to my case at UVA which was particularly problematic because of the way the school determined that a "lesser" offense occurred. They clearly wanted to give out a lesser punishment, but they did soby irrationally finding an offender responsible for a lesser charge that made no sense on the facts. That they had so many damn definitionswas a problem they could have avoided by making things more simple in the nature of the offenses defined in their rules..The only thing schools need is a sexual harassment policy that defines the behavior by including a list of possibly actionable conduct.
Then include a range of punishments. You MUST ALSO resist the temptation to punish penetration crimes more harshly than non-penetration crimes - for several reasons -
not the least of which is that a victim who is not penetrated could easily suffer far more harm than one who is penetrated.
It is a myth - and overtly sexist - to suggest that the moment that matters most is when the penisenters the vagina. This idea grows from old-fashioned notions about how the harm to a woman is related to her value as a virgin.The purpose of any effective policy should be to establish firm concepts around autonomy, bodily integrity and gender-discrimination.This is easily doable with a simple, rather than multi-tiered, process.I just wrote a gender-violence policy for the NCAA. It is short and sweet and clear - thus, easy to implement and fair to possible offenders in thatit doesn't mince words of make things seem complicated or gray.On of the themes I teach in my class is the way law causes problems in enforcement by needless complications and contrived confusion. Rapecases are not complicated - nor are they "difficult" to navigate or prove. Just as rape myths about women's credibility infect the fairness ofall forms of redress for victims, myths about how "difficult" rape cases are to prove and defend serve primarily to forgive responsible officialsfor their failure to deter the behavior through swift, fair and meaningful justice.
Wendy Murphy
- sexual assault policies, wmurphylaw, 12/20/2010
- <Possible follow-up(s)>
- Re: sexual assault policies, BASokolow, 12/20/2010
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