The difficulty with accusations of rape when a victim is voluntarily intoxicated has long prevailed in the courtroom. How and where to draw the line of being legally capable to consent has been debated in several cases and by many academics. This article will discuss this dilemma and how it may be solved
The concept of consent is fundamental in considering the crime of rape under the Sexual Offences Act...
This article considers the law, of New Zealand and England and Wales, relating to determinations whe...
The prosecution of rape frequently requires a jury to decide whether the defendant reasonably believ...
Sexual offences in England and Wales have had a dramatic reimagining in the last 15 years, with the ...
The paper explores the contemporary concerns surrounding issues of intoxicated consent in cases of r...
Research shows that a significant number of sexual assaults occur after victims have consumed an exc...
With respect to voluntary intoxication and campus sexual assault, the law can better reconcile the p...
Drunken sex is common. Despite how common drunken sex is, we think very uncritically about it. In th...
This article considers how the law of sexual assault in Canada addresses cases involving intoxicated...
AbstractIn this article the applicability of the concept of consent is examined in rape cases where ...
Jurors often negatively evaluate complainants making allegations of rape when those complainants wer...
Although long associated with incidents of sexual violence, evidence of alcohol and/or other drug (‘...
This article considers how the criminal law of sexual assault in Canada deals with cases of women wh...
What are the rules governing intoxication as a defence, and are any of those rules unconstitutional?...
'She is in the true sense asking for it'/ 'If she doesn't want it she only has to keep her legs shut...
The concept of consent is fundamental in considering the crime of rape under the Sexual Offences Act...
This article considers the law, of New Zealand and England and Wales, relating to determinations whe...
The prosecution of rape frequently requires a jury to decide whether the defendant reasonably believ...
Sexual offences in England and Wales have had a dramatic reimagining in the last 15 years, with the ...
The paper explores the contemporary concerns surrounding issues of intoxicated consent in cases of r...
Research shows that a significant number of sexual assaults occur after victims have consumed an exc...
With respect to voluntary intoxication and campus sexual assault, the law can better reconcile the p...
Drunken sex is common. Despite how common drunken sex is, we think very uncritically about it. In th...
This article considers how the law of sexual assault in Canada addresses cases involving intoxicated...
AbstractIn this article the applicability of the concept of consent is examined in rape cases where ...
Jurors often negatively evaluate complainants making allegations of rape when those complainants wer...
Although long associated with incidents of sexual violence, evidence of alcohol and/or other drug (‘...
This article considers how the criminal law of sexual assault in Canada deals with cases of women wh...
What are the rules governing intoxication as a defence, and are any of those rules unconstitutional?...
'She is in the true sense asking for it'/ 'If she doesn't want it she only has to keep her legs shut...
The concept of consent is fundamental in considering the crime of rape under the Sexual Offences Act...
This article considers the law, of New Zealand and England and Wales, relating to determinations whe...
The prosecution of rape frequently requires a jury to decide whether the defendant reasonably believ...