#MeToo,法定强奸法和性别刻板印象的持续存在

Leslie Y. Garfield Tenzer
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引用次数: 3

摘要

在20世纪70年代末和80年代初,女权主义者推动了法定强奸法的改革。当时,各州法律明确规定,只有男性才能被指控与低于一定年龄的女性性交。法定强奸的受害者总是女性。女权主义者主张应该以中性的措辞改写法律。他们希望,法定强奸法中的正式平等将导致承认男性和女性都有性代理权,并在整个社会中实现更大的平等。不幸的是,这些法律赋予检察官的自由裁量权延续而不是废除了传统的男性/女性陈规定型观念。2017年10月,由于男性对女性下属行使不可接受的权力,爆发了一场社会运动。#MeToo运动暴露了女性在工作场所经历的性骚扰、性虐待和性暴力的普遍存在。#MeToo运动的目标与性别中立的法定强奸法支持者的目标没有什么不同,该法寻求男女平等对待。不幸的是,#MeToo和各州通过的性别中立的法定强奸法有另一个共同现象。#MeToo运动和性别中立法律的实际执行都创造了一种“受害者学范式”。似乎承认性别不平等需要承认女性的弱点。本文以法定强奸法为例,解释了促进男女平等的运动如何无法实现其既定目标。文章首先探讨了传统的法定强奸法,这些法律对施暴者和受害者进行了性别歧视。接着讨论了全国范围内为消除性别法规而进行的变革背后的政治力量。这篇文章重点关注了性别中立的法定强奸法的缺陷,该法通过取消对受害者和施暴者的性别指定,赋予检察官不受约束的自由裁量权,在双方同意同一被禁止行为的情况下,选择起诉哪一方。如今,检察官指控男性法定强奸的可能性是指控女性犯罪的三倍。女性父母提醒当局禁止其女儿进行性活动的比率与男性父母的比率大不相称。检察官对青少年之间被禁止的性亲密关系的刻板印象造成了女性受害者模式的不幸回归,而性别中立的法定强奸法的支持者试图消除这种模式。文章最后提出了一项建议,以期更加平衡地适用不分性别的法律。文化运动可能会产生意想不到的后果。这篇文章解释了妇女权利运动旨在消除性别法定强奸法的运动如何未能实现其平等社会的目标。如今,越来越多的声音认为,#MeToo,就像中性法定强奸法的实际应用一样,剥夺了女性的权力。这篇文章揭露了立法向性别中立转变的有害影响,并解释了它如何成为#MeToo运动和工作场所平等斗争的警示故事。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
#MeToo, Statutory Rape Laws, and the Persistence of Gender Stereotypes
In the late 1970’s and early 1980’s, feminists pushed for reform of statutory rape laws. At that time, states’ laws explicitly provided that only males could be charged with the crime of having sexual intercourse with a female below a certain age. The victims of statutory rape were always female. Feminists advocated that the law should be rewritten in gender-neutral terms. They hoped that formal equality in statutory rapes laws would lead to the recognition that both males and females have sexual agency and greater equality in society as a whole. Unfortunately, the prosecutorial discretion granted by the language of these laws perpetuate rather than abolishes traditional male/female stereotypes. In October 2017, a social movement erupted out of the unacceptable exercise by men of their power over female subordinates. The #MeToo movement exposed the widespread prevalence of sexual harassment, sexual abuse, and sexual violence that women experience in the workplace. The #MeToo movement’s objective is not dissimilar to the goal of proponents of gender-neutral statutory rape laws, which seek to have men and women treated equally. Unfortunately, #MeToo and state adoption of gender-neutral statutory rape laws share another phenomenon. Both the #MeToo movement and the practical enforcement of gender-neutral laws create a “victimology paradigm.” It seems that recognizing inequality among genders requires conceding perceived female frailties. Using the example of statutory rape laws, this article explains how movements for increased equality between men and women can fail to meet their stated goals. The article begins by exploring traditional statutory rape laws, which stereotypically gendered perpetrators and victims. It follows with a discussion of the political forces behind the nation-wide change to neutralize gendered statutes. The article dedicates significant attention to the flaws of gender-neutral statutory rape laws, which, by removing gender designations of victims and perpetrators, grant prosecutors unchecked discretion to choose which partner to charge in cases of mutual consent to the same prohibited conduct. Today prosecutors are three times more likely to charge males with statutory rape than they are to charge females with the crime. Parents of females’ alert authorities of prohibited sexual activity of their daughters at a rate that is largely disproportionate to that of parents of males. Prosecutorial stereotyping as it pertains to prohibited sexual intimacy between consenting teens has created an unfortunate return to the female-victim paradigm that proponents of gender-neutral statutory rape laws sought to erase. The article concludes with a recommendation for achieving a more balanced application of gender-neutral laws. Cultural movements can have unintended consequences. This article explains how the women’s rights movement’s campaign to neutralize gendered statutory rape laws failed to achieve its goal of an equal society. Today, a growing number of voices suggest that #MeToo, like the practical application of gender-neutral statutory rape laws, disempowers women. This article exposes the pernicious effects of the legislative shift to gender neutrality and explains how it serves as a cautionary tale to the #MeToo movement and the fight for workplace equality.
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