Sex uden samtykke ̶ udviklingen i islandsk ret

Abstract Penal Code chapters on sexual offences have been revised in all the Nordic countries in recent years. The concept of rape has been changed and is now much more extensive than before. In Iceland, the Penal Code´s (GPC) provisions on rape and other violations of people´s sexual freedom wer...

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Main Author: Ragnheiður Bragadóttir
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: De Nordiske Kriminalistforeninger 2021-02-01
Series:Nordisk Tidsskrift for Kriminalvidenskab
Online Access:https://tidsskrift.dk/NTfK/article/view/124775
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author Ragnheiður Bragadóttir
author_facet Ragnheiður Bragadóttir
author_sort Ragnheiður Bragadóttir
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Penal Code chapters on sexual offences have been revised in all the Nordic countries in recent years. The concept of rape has been changed and is now much more extensive than before. In Iceland, the Penal Code´s (GPC) provisions on rape and other violations of people´s sexual freedom were revised and changed with Act no 61/2007. These amendments included a new, broad statutory definition of the concept of rape, which was  supposed to cover incidents where the victim did not consent to having intercourse or other sexual interactions with the offender. The concept of consent was not mentioned in the provision, but instead the unlawful act was defined as rape if the perpetrator had intercourse or other sexual interactions with the victim by using violence, any kinds of threats, for example threats on the internet, or other kinds of unlawful coercion, under par. all 1 of Art. 194 GPC. According to par. 2 of Art. 194 GPC, rape also involves the abuse of the situation of a person, who does not have the same capacities as adults generally do to defend themselves against sexual attacks. This can be the abuse of a victim’s permanent condition, i.e. a mental illness or any other type of psychological disability, to have sex with the victim, or the abuse of a victim’s temporary condition which causes the victim to be unable to defend themselves against the offence, e.g. because the victim is drunk, sleeping, or unconscious because of the use of medicines or drugs. In 2018 the definition of rape under par. 1 of Art. 194 was revised again and consent is now included in the provision. It is considered consent if an individual expresses it of his or her own volition. It is not considered consent if violence, threats, or any other type of unlawful coercion is used. Note, however, that this new definition from 2018, where consent is included in the provision on rape does not constitute a substantive change since lack of consent was already an underlying element of the act as previously written and the methods that exclude consent are the same as the ones in the provison from 2007. The article addresses these changes from 2007 and 2018 and the effects they have had on judgments in rape cases, as well as in society.
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spelling doaj-art-c84b586afaa64a1d8a18d0174e4f70702025-01-08T07:29:37ZdanDe Nordiske KriminalistforeningerNordisk Tidsskrift for Kriminalvidenskab2446-30512021-02-01106217518710.7146/ntfk.v106i2.124775118000Sex uden samtykke ̶ udviklingen i islandsk retRagnheiður BragadóttirAbstract Penal Code chapters on sexual offences have been revised in all the Nordic countries in recent years. The concept of rape has been changed and is now much more extensive than before. In Iceland, the Penal Code´s (GPC) provisions on rape and other violations of people´s sexual freedom were revised and changed with Act no 61/2007. These amendments included a new, broad statutory definition of the concept of rape, which was  supposed to cover incidents where the victim did not consent to having intercourse or other sexual interactions with the offender. The concept of consent was not mentioned in the provision, but instead the unlawful act was defined as rape if the perpetrator had intercourse or other sexual interactions with the victim by using violence, any kinds of threats, for example threats on the internet, or other kinds of unlawful coercion, under par. all 1 of Art. 194 GPC. According to par. 2 of Art. 194 GPC, rape also involves the abuse of the situation of a person, who does not have the same capacities as adults generally do to defend themselves against sexual attacks. This can be the abuse of a victim’s permanent condition, i.e. a mental illness or any other type of psychological disability, to have sex with the victim, or the abuse of a victim’s temporary condition which causes the victim to be unable to defend themselves against the offence, e.g. because the victim is drunk, sleeping, or unconscious because of the use of medicines or drugs. In 2018 the definition of rape under par. 1 of Art. 194 was revised again and consent is now included in the provision. It is considered consent if an individual expresses it of his or her own volition. It is not considered consent if violence, threats, or any other type of unlawful coercion is used. Note, however, that this new definition from 2018, where consent is included in the provision on rape does not constitute a substantive change since lack of consent was already an underlying element of the act as previously written and the methods that exclude consent are the same as the ones in the provison from 2007. The article addresses these changes from 2007 and 2018 and the effects they have had on judgments in rape cases, as well as in society.https://tidsskrift.dk/NTfK/article/view/124775
spellingShingle Ragnheiður Bragadóttir
Sex uden samtykke ̶ udviklingen i islandsk ret
Nordisk Tidsskrift for Kriminalvidenskab
title Sex uden samtykke ̶ udviklingen i islandsk ret
title_full Sex uden samtykke ̶ udviklingen i islandsk ret
title_fullStr Sex uden samtykke ̶ udviklingen i islandsk ret
title_full_unstemmed Sex uden samtykke ̶ udviklingen i islandsk ret
title_short Sex uden samtykke ̶ udviklingen i islandsk ret
title_sort sex uden samtykke ̶ udviklingen i islandsk ret
url https://tidsskrift.dk/NTfK/article/view/124775
work_keys_str_mv AT ragnheiðurbragadottir sexudensamtykkeudviklingeniislandskret