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Consent laws vary by jurisdiction and over time. Currently, there is a move away from basing consent laws on an apparent refusal (no means no) and toward affirmative or enthusiastic consent. While consent laws are written in a gender-neutral manner, they are always applied in a gendered way. The focus is always on female support, with male consent ignored or presumed always to be present.
It is now established in law in virtually all jurisdictions that consent to sex can be withdrawn at any time. This should be considered when understanding the implications of affirmative consent below.
This has been the dominant form of consent in many societies during the modern era. Legal support is withdrawn when one participant makes a clear statement or gesture (such as forcefully pulling away) indicating backing has been removed. Engaging in sexual activity after approval has been withdrawn could constitute sexual assault. This level of support was characterized in the western world through advertising campaigns revolving around the phrase. Which part of no don’t you understand?.
Notably, Western courts grant a person very little time to cease sexual activity following the withdrawal of consent. Maouloud Baby was convicted of rape in the United States after a woman alleged that he continued sexual intercourse with her for five seconds after she withdrew support. Maouloud Baby was a minor at the time. Kevin Ibbs was convicted of rape in Australia after a woman alleged that he continued sexual intercourse with her for around 30 seconds after she withdrew consent.
No means no is increasingly being replaced in Western nations by affirmative and enthusiastic consent, which are better characterized as yes means yes.
Consent laws worldwide are moving towards affirmative consent, in which the onus of proof is on the accused. While affirmative consent regulations and laws are gender-neutral, they are always applied in a gendered way where it is presumed that the man continues to provide consent and that only the woman’s license needs to be considered. The remainder of this section will be phrased in the manner that regulations and laws are applied.
In an affirmative consent jurisdiction, a woman engaging in sex with a man need not notify the man when she withdraws consent. Instead, it is presumed that the man needs to take note of her affirmation of support (verbally or otherwise) and cease sexual activity if he does not observe it. This shifts the onus of proof to a man accused of sexual assault, as it is now up to the man to establish that the woman did not withdraw consent.
In an affirmative consent jurisdiction, consent to sex can be withdrawn by a woman at any time without notice. A man seeking to defend himself against an allegation of sexual assault in an affirmative consent jurisdiction must establish to the court that the woman had consented to sex continuously. It is unrealistic to presume that a man could offer sufficient evidence to prove continuous consent. Men who have sex with women in affirmative consent jurisdictions are opening themselves up to the risk of future prosecution. It should also be considered that most jurisdictions have no statute of limitations on criminal matters, meaning a man may be expected to show a woman consented to sex decades after the event.
Consent can be withdrawn at any time, so affirmative consent has to be continuous to have any value. If the woman stops consenting affirmatively, the man must cease all sexual activity, or he could go to jail.
The inherent flaw in affirmative consent is that consent, or the lack thereof, exists only in the accuser’s mind. The courts can never honestly know what was in the accuser’s sense when they asserted they were sexually assaulted. There is a legal principle that says that intent is established from actions. Affirmative consent, however, requires no actions on the part of the accuser, so it is impossible to develop a lack of support. The accuser could be engaging in no activity and yet still be consenting. The courts can establish that consent was granted but can never establish that it wasn’t. Thus the assertion of lack of support on the part of the accuser becomes unfalsifiable.
Enthusiastic consent is similar to affirmative consent but goes beyond merely affirming support. Now it must be enthusiastically given.
New York state is considering introducing laws that would make it a crime to be less than entirely truthful with sex partners. So a man lying about his social status or job would find himself charged due to having sex with a woman without consent.[1]
Feminists have consistently and widely claimed that affirmative consent would not move the onus of proof to the accused. Despite this, the Queensland government has admitted to considering moving the onus of evidence to the accused under proposed changes to consent laws.[2]
The onus of proof and the excuse of mistake of fact
[58] A fundamental principle is that the onus of proof in criminal proceedings rests with the prosecution. For rape or sexual assault, the prosecution must prove every element of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. Further, suppose the mistake of fact as to consent is raised on the evidence. In that case, the prosecution must prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant did not honestly believe that the complainant gave permission or that any such belief was not reasonably held.
[59] The Commission has carefully considered the arguments for and against reversing the onus of proof for the excuse of mistake of fact onto a defendant charged with an offense under Chapter 32 of the Criminal Code. It has concluded that there is no adequate justification for reversing the onus of proof. The interests of justice are best served by maintaining the status quo, which in the Commission’s view, strikes the right balance between the rights of the individual and the broader interests of the community. [3]
Submissions—opposition
5.35 The Queensland Council for Civil Liberties similarly noted that a legislative model that requires affirmative consent fails ‘to adequately recognize the deep subjectivity and diversity of human sexual experience.’
5.36 The respondent submitted that creating an affirmative consent model would involve practically reversing the onus of proof. This, it was submitted, would mainly be the case if legislation were introduced requiring the person seeking to engage in sexual activity to take steps to ascertain consent. [4]
The Queensland government admits that no Common Law jurisdiction has enacted affirmative consent.
CLEAR AND UNEQUIVOCAL ‘YES’
5.47 This option would require consent to be communicated by an unequivocal ‘yes.’
5.48 A reform of this nature would be unique in Australia and other jurisdictions with similar sexual assault provisions.
On the 25th of May 2021, the New South Wales (NSW) state government announced their intention to introduce affirmative consent laws.[5] A proposal to introduce a phone app for consent drew criticism because consent can be withdrawn at any time.[6]
The New South Wales (NSW) Law society recommended only minor changes to the definition of consent and considered an affirmative consent definition undesirable.[7][8] The NSW Council for Civil Liberties raised concerns about the new laws.[9]
These legislative changes were initially proposed following the acquittal of Luke Lazarus.
“If you want to engage in sexual activity with someone, then you need to do or say something to find out if they want to have sex with you too – it’s that simple,” NSW Attorney-General Mark Speakman said. [10]
If this law only applies before sexual activity begins, as the Attorney General claims here, then it does nothing to change the definition of consent.
If it is continuous, which is what it would need to be affirmative consent, then agreement before beginning does nothing to establish ongoing support.
Feminists have recently claimed that Victoria has had affirmative consent for years.[11] This is true, but the state has made legislative changes that have moved it towards affirmative consent.[12]
A recent study on rape trials in Victoria noted:
“Legislative reform in Victoria has moved towards an affirmative consent standard, requiring active communication by all parties to a sexual act. Such a standard should safeguard against narratives of force and resistance in rape trials and place the onus on the accused to establish consent.” [13]
Sweden has an offense known as negligent rape in which the accused can be convicted because they did not correctly establish consent even though all parties admit they did not intend to rape.[14] This appears to be the genuine use of affirmative consent in law.
The critical points of this article are:
A man could have sex with a woman and have her accuse him of rape 30 years later, only to find that he has to prove she enthusiastically consented to the sex to clear his name. It’s nearly impossible to prove this at the time, but it would likely be impossible decades later.
Feminists are now starting to argue that consent should be irrelevant and that rape should be redefined so that it can be established based on power dynamics.[15]