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Marital rape

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Spousal rape is non-consensual sexual assault in which the perpetrator is the victim's spouse.

Spousal rape is also called marital rape and often conflated with partner rape or intimate partner sexual assault (IPSA). Because there is a widely held view that a man or woman surrenders consent upon entering a marriage, the law has been slow to criminalize this form of rape/sexual assault. It is now a crime in most parts of the Western world, but exemptions still apply in some places; for example in some places marital rape cannot be prosecuted if the couple were living together at the time of the assault.

Due to popular stereotypes of "real" rape, it is often assumed that because spouses have been sexually intimate, marital rape is not as traumatic as other types of rape. However the research of Finkelhor and Yllo (1985) and Bergen (1996) found that victims of marital/partner rape suffer longer-lasting trauma than victims of stranger rape. One reason for this is thought to be the lack of social validation that prevents a victim from getting access to support. Domestic violence services have made inroads in addressing this problem.

  Marital rape is criminalized
Sources: Unicef 1997.[1] UNIFEM 2003.[2]

Historically, many cultures have had a concept of a spouses' conjugal right [1] to sexual intercourse with each other. The proposition of Christian teaching influence in Western culture need be considered, in particular, St. Paul's teaching, "For the wife does not have authority over her own body, but the husband does; likewise the husband does not have authority over his own body, but the wife does. Do not deprive one another except perhaps by agreement for a set time, to devote yourselves to prayer" (1 Cor. 7:3-4a, RSV). This can be seen in Common law, in force in North America and the British Commonwealth, where the very concept of marital rape was treated as an impossibility. This was illustrated most vividly by Sir Matthew Hale, in his classic legal treatise, Historia Placitorum Coronae, where he wrote that such a rape could not be recognized since the wife "…hath given up herself in this kinde unto her husband, which she cannot retract."

As the concept of human rights has developed, the belief of a marital right to sexual intercourse has become less widely held. In December 1993, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights published the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women [2]. This establishes marital rape as a human rights violation. This is not fully recognized by all UN member states. In 1997, UNICEF reported that just 17 states criminalized marital rape.[1] In 2003, UNIFEM reported that more than 50 states did so.[2]

Many United States rape statutes used to preclude spousal prosecution, including estranged or even legally separated couples. In 1975, South Dakota removed this exception. By 1993, this was the case throughout the United States.[3] However, 33 of 50 U.S. states regard spousal rape as a lesser crime [Bergen, 1999]. The perpetrator may be charged with related crimes such as assault, battery, or spousal abuse. It is also known that even if a spouse has an illness in which they are unable to respond, the other spouse may engage them in conjugal relations without criminal liability. There are other criminal charges that may be inapplicable to married couples. For example, in the U.S., marriage precludes a charge of statutory rape even if one of the spouses is under the age of consent in the jurisdiction where the sexual act takes place.

In India, the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act 2005 (passed August 2005; entered into force October 2006) criminalizes marital rape as a form of domestic violence.[3][4] Noted Thai legal scholar Taweekiet Meenakanit voiced his opposition to legal reforms that made spousal rape in Thailand a crime. He said it was "abnormal logic" to allow a man to file a rape charge against a woman. He also disagrees with making a crime of a husband raping his wife as this would be difficult to effect since some Thai wives were dependent on their husbands and that wives may fear that husbands jailed for raping them might seek revenge after being released. [5] Recent countries to criminalize marital rape include: Turkey (2005)[6], Mauritius (2007),[7] Thailand (2007).[8]

Statistics

Diana E.H. Russell, a researcher into rape, reports that 8% of 900 randomly selected women in the U.S. reported they had been raped by a husband. A survey by the National Victim Center in Arlington, Virginia, states that 10% of all sexual assault cases reported by women involved a husband or ex-husband.

In 1994, Patricia Easteal, then Senior Criminologist at the Australian Institute of Criminology, published the results of survey on sexual assault in many settings. The respondents were survivors of numerous forms of sexual assault. Of these, 10.4% had been raped by husbands or de facto spouses, with a further 2.3 per cent raped by estranged husbands/de factos. .

In 1975, the results of an American study on many rape situations were published. Russell was so appalled by her findings on rape in marriage that she decided to conduct a research project on this area alone. From the 930 interviews conducted with women from across section of race and class, Russell concluded that rape in marriage was the most common yet most neglected area of sexual violence (Russell, 1990)

David Finkelhor and Kersti Yllo's 1985 study estimated that 10 to 14 per cent of all married American women have been or will be raped by their husbands. (Finkelhor and Yllo, 1985)

In the UK, statistics disseminated by the Rape Crisis Federation yield the information that the most common rapists are current and ex-husbands or partners (Myhill & Allen, Rape and Sexual Assault of Women: Findings from the British Crime Survey)


Problems in prosecuting Spousal Rape

There have been many problems with prosecuting the perpetrators of spousal rape, chief amongst them has been the reluctance of the various legal systems to recognize it as a crime at all. However, criminalization has opened a new set of problems. To take an example in the United Kingdom, such a category of rape was only recognized by a 1991 House of Lords decision known simply as R v R ([1991] All ER 481). Whilst most parties agreed with the Lords' motive in making the decision, there were many (for instance the writer Patricia Hirst in her Textbook on A-Level law)[citation needed] who were of the opinion that the decision involved post facto criminalization, since their lordships were imprisoning spouses for doing what was once, according to the law, their right.

The second problem arises on what can be called a procedural level. Whilst the law in theory may hold no distinction between a spouse or any other person, in practice when the case comes to court there will be difficulties in proving that rape in fact took place. This is due to the fact that in marriage, sexual relations are to be expected, and if the defense claims consent, then the evidential burden is a very difficult burden for the prosecution to discharge. [4]

The very definition of consent can also lead to problems and deadlock, since social norms permit a varying level of physical intimacy (and freedom) depending on the relationship between the parties.

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b UNICEF, The Progress of Nations, 1997, 48.
  2. ^ a b United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM), not a minute more: Ending Violence Against Women, 2003.
  3. ^ Justin Huggler, "India abolishes husbands' 'right' to rape wife," Independent (London), October 27, 2006.
  4. ^ South Asia Research Institute for Policy and Development, INDIA’S LANDMARK DOMESTIC ABUSE LAW TAKES EFFECT, October 26, 2006.
  5. ^ The Nation, Anger over proposed change to rape laws, 14 February 2007
  6. ^ Anti-Discrimination Committee Takes Up Situation of Women in Turkey, UN Information Service, 21 January 2005.
  7. ^ "RAPE AND THE SEXUAL OFFENCES BILL Beyond the illogical, punitive attitude...," l'express, 23 April 2007.
  8. ^ "Thailand outlaws marital rape," AFP, June 22, 2007.

See also