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61 Calif. L. Rev. 919 (1973)
Rape and Rape Laws: Sexism in Society and Law

handle is hein.journals/calr61 and id is 945 raw text is: RAPE AND RAPE LAWS: SEXISM IN
SOCIETY AND LAW
In hundreds of ways, large and small, a woman's life is shaped
by the persistent threat of rape: women hesitate to venture out at night
without male escorts, to live alone, to hitchhike, to stay late at the of-
fice to work alone, to take certain jobs. Men in prison who live with
the threat of homosexual rape are probably the only men in our so-
ciety who experience fear comparable to that felt by all women. The
fear of rape not only inhibits the freedom of women, it also exagger-
ates the dependency of women upon men. The law concerning forci-
ble rape and the way it functions both influences and is influenced
by the relationship between men and women in our society. Yet the
legal commentators who have written on the subject have not analyzed
rape laws with any sensitivity to this phenomenon. And they have
ignored the possibility that rape laws as they are presently conceived,
rather than protecting women, might actually work to their disadvan-
tage by hindering prosecution of rapists and by exacerbating the in-
equality between men and women.
This Comment argues that rape laws are largely based on tradi-
tional attitudes about social roles and sexual mores. The structure of
the laws, enforcement, and prosecution are all based on untested
assumptions about the incidence of the crime, the motivation of the
criminal, and the psychology of the victim. As a result, the laws do
not effectively deter rape: police enforcement of complaints is inade-
quate, and judicial treatment of defendants is oversolicitious. Thus
rape laws are not designed, nor do they function, to protect a woman's
interest in physical integrity. Indeed, rather than protecting women, the
rape laws might actually be a disability for them, since they reinforce
traditional attitudes about social and sexual roles. Although societal
attitudes no doubt are responsible for the present construction of rape
laws, it is also true that this construction serves to reinforce those at-
titudes. If the laws were changed to relate more rationally to the re-
ality of the crime and to the goal of sexual equality, attitudes about
the crime might also change.
This Comment is concerned only with forcible rape, which gener-
ally refers to sexual intercourse accomplished without the consent of
the female.1 Since consent is the crucial element in rape, forcible
1. Although few of the total number of rapes are reported to police [see text
accompanying notes 8-13 infra), this Comment proceeds on the assumption that the
available information describing reported rapes accurately describes all forcible rapes.

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