Content area

Abstract

Within the context of U.K. law, the right to respect for private life, articulated in Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, and acknowledged more opaquely in domestic legislation and case law, is one whose scope is unclear. Nowhere is this brought into sharper relief than in cases where conduct which manifests a person's sexual identity, or concerns her intimate relations with others, is prima facie criminal. In this essay I attempt, through a discussion of cases in which injury is caused in the context of relationships experienced inter-subjectively as private, to explore the contexts in which the law is prepared to legitimate that inter-subjective experience, and where it is not. Using cases in which injury has been caused purposively (in S/M sex), and incidentally (through the reckless transmission of HIV during sexual intercourse), the essay argues that the law is prepared to respect the right to respect for private life only in so far as the private life concerned is one which reinforces traditional gender roles and relationship types; in short, a life that one would be prepared to live publicly.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Harm, Consent and the Limits of Privacy
Author
Weait, Matthew
Pages
97-122
Publication year
2005
Publication date
Jan 2005
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
09663622
e-ISSN
15728455
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
881368773
Copyright
Springer 2005