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Affirmative sexual consent: what the NSW law reforms mean and how other states compare

Last modified on Tue 25 May 2021 00.53 EDT The New South Wales government on Tuesday announced it would change the laws around sexual consent to better deliver justice to victims and survivors of sexual assault. The changes come after a law reform commission review and a campaign by advocates such as Saxon Mullins, who was the subject of a major Four Corners investigation. What is proposed in NSW? The NSW government plan to adopt an affirmative consent model. This means a person must do or say something to affirm they have consent before sex occurs. The reforms will mean: (a) a person does not consent to sexual activity unless they said or did something to communicate consent; and

NSW pledges to overhaul antiquated consent laws

While the new bill is yet to be tabled, Speakman said he supported the commission’s 44 recommendations. He said the definition of consent would change to “something that s given voluntarily and freely by agreement”. That it can be withdrawn at any time … consent to one sexual activity is not consent to any other sexual activity and that self-intoxication of the accused is not an excuse for failing to form a reasonable belief,” he told the ABC. Saxon Mullins from Rape and Sexual Assault Research and Advocacy said that she was pleased that this day had come but that apart from the reforming the law, which was “a significant step”, more focus was needed to ensure “all survivors’ voices are heard and their justice is sought, whatever way that is for them”.

Massive overhaul for sex consent laws closes loophole used by rapists to avoid being sent to jail

Four years after Saxon Mullins walked out of a court room feeling lost, alone and powerless , NSW is introducing a law that would have jailed the man she accused of raping her in a Kings Cross alleyway. Ms Mullins became the face of a national push to strengthen sexual consent laws, after telling the ABC how she was sexually assaulted as an 18-year-old virgin behind a nightclub in 2013 by a man she d met minutes earlier. Two trials and two appeals later, a judge found the man involved had no reasonable basis for believing she had not consented while acknowledging that Ms Mullins - in her own mind - had not consented.

Sweeping changes to consent laws in NSW an important step towards addressing sexual violence

Share on Twitter People accused of sexual assault will need to prove they took steps to obtain consent, as part of a major overhaul of sexual consent laws in New South Wales.  NSW Attorney General Mark Speakman announced the reforms on Tuesday that he says will strengthen and simplify laws in the state and protect victim-survivors.  That includes adopting the so-called affirmative consent model, which means a person does not consent to sexual activity until they say or do something to communicate it. It also means an accused person s belief in consent will not be reasonable unless they said or did something to ascertain consent from their sexual partners.

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