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El. knyga: Criminalizing Intimate Image Abuse: A Comparative Perspective

Edited by (Associate Professor of Criminal Law, Free University of Bolzano), Edited by (Adjunct Professor of Criminal Law, University of Bologna)
  • Formatas: 448 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 27-Jan-2024
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780198877851
  • Formatas: 448 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 27-Jan-2024
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780198877851

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Criminalizing Intimate Image Abuse strives to generate new conceptual and theoretical frameworks to address the legal responses to intimate image abuse by bringing together a number of scholars involved in the study of image abuse over recent years.


Intimate image abuse is a recent, endemic phenomenon which raises multiple legal issues and presents a significant challenge for the traditional institutions of law and justice. The nature of this phenomenon not only involves the legal complexities of regulating privacy, sexual offences, and cybercrime, but also requires an understanding of the social and cultural issues of what may be considered 'intimate', 'private' or, indeed, 'sexual'.

Since the harm experienced by victims of intimate image violence is particularly serious and involves disparate legal interests, criminal law has been invoked as one of the solutions, but it is unclear what its role and limits should be. The law's approach aims to avoid any moralistic attitude, trying to achieve a balance between sexual autonomy and the protection of sexual privacy. At the same time, the needs of criminalization must be balanced with the traditional principles of criminal law.

Criminalizing Intimate Image Abuse strives primarily to generate new conceptual and theoretical frameworks to address the legal responses to this phenomenon, by bringing together a number of scholars involved in the study of image abuse over recent years. This book compares and contrasts the various solutions developed in different legal systems. The comparative perspective is mainly focused between the Anglo-American criminalization model and that of continental Europe, but there are also overviews of the state of criminalization in Asian and Latin American countries.

Once the criminalization of intimate image abuse, and its theoretical and practical limits, has been established, the analysis of the book focuses on possible new legal strategies, complementary or alternative to traditional criminal justice, to create an effective safeguard for victims. The role of internet service providers and bystanders in working to prevent abuse or possible forms of restorative justice is also considered.
1: Gian Marco Caletti, Kolis Summerer: Criminalizing Intimate Image
Abuse: An Introduction
Part I: The Theoretical Framework of Intimate Image Abuse and its
Criminialization
2: Danielle K. Citron: Intimate Image Abuse: Intimate Privacy Violation
3: Jane Bailey, Suzie Dunn: Recurring Themes in Tech-Facilitated Sexual
Violence Over Time: The More Things Change, The More They Stay The Same
4: Maria Elósegui: The Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights on
Violence Against Women and Intimate Image Abuse
5: Aya Gruber: Crimes against Criminalization
Part II: Beyond Revenge Pornography: Foundations of the Criminalization of
Intimate Image Abuse
6: Anja Schmidt: The Abuse of Sexual Images between Liberal Criminal Law and
the Protection of Sexual Autonomy
7: Thomas Crofts: Refining the Contours of Intimate Image Abuse Offences
8: Margareth Helfer, Domenico Rosani: Is This Intimate Image Abuse?
Part III: Patterns of Criminalization of Intimate Image Abuse in Europe and
Anglo-American Systems
9: Mary Anne Franks: The Criminalization of Nonconsensual Pornography in the
United States
10: Manuel Cancio Meliį: Patterns of Criminalization of Intimate Image Abuse:
Continental Approaches and Foundations
Part IV: Regional Reports on Intimate Image Abuse from Latin America and
Asia
11: Marķa Camila Correa Flórez: Criminalization of Intimate Image Abuse in
Latin America
12: Yoshifumi Okada: Criminalization of Intimate Image Abuse in Japan
Part V: Changing the Culture of Consent
13: Thomas Weigend: Consent - Making the Difference Between Pleasure and
Crime
14: Michael Vitiello: Victims of Intimate Image Abuse and Other Crimes. Is It
Right to Blame Them?
Part VI: The Law in Practice from the Victim's Perspective
15: Nicola Henry: 'It Wasn't Worth the Pain to Me to Pursue It': Justice for
Australian Victim-Survivors of Image-Based Sexual Abuse
16: Moira Aikenhead: Image-Based Abuse in Intimate Partnerships in Canada:
Lessons from the Criminal Case Law
Part VII: Law Enforcement, Prevention and Alternative Justice Strategies
17: Clare McGlynn: Seeking Justice for Image-Based Sexual Abuse: Examining
the Possibilities of Restorative and Transformative Justice Approaches
18: Johanna Rinceanu: The Changing Role of Internet Service Providers:
Governing Cyber Violence and Online 'Hate Speech' against Women
19: Asher Flynn, Adrian J. Scott, and Elena Cama: An Empirical Research Study
on Barriers, Facilitators, and Strategies to Promote Bystander Intervention
in Intimate Image Abuse Contexts
GIAN MARCO CALETTI is an Adjunct Professor of Criminal Law at the University of Bologna (Italy), where he obtained his PhD in criminal law. From 2019 to 2022 he was a research fellow at the Free University of Bolzano, working on the interdisciplinary research project 'CREEP Criminalizing Revenge Porn?'. He was a visiting scholar at the Universities of Cambridge, New York (NYU), and Durham. Among the first Italian scholars to deal with image-based sexual abuse, he repeatedly advised national institutions. His research focuses on criminal negligence and recklessness, as well as on sexual crimes. He is the author of the first Italian book on consent in sexual assault.

KOLIS SUMMERER is an Associate Professor of Criminal Law at the Free University of Bolzano (Italy), where she led the interdisciplinary research project 'CREEP Criminalizing Revenge Porn?'. She received her PhD in criminal law and criminal procedure at the University of Bologna and was awarded research grants from the Max Planck Society. Her research focuses on substantive criminal law, as well as on other key topics like gender violence and restorative justice. She is the author of a monograph on causation in criminal law and published many articles in national and international journals and books.