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Sex And The Law Wikipedia

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This article examines how human sexuality and sexual behavior interacts with, and is regulated by, human laws.

In general the law proscribes acts which are considered either sexual abuse, or inappropriate behavior against the social norms, within a given culture. In addition certain categories of activity, may be considered crimes even if freely consented to. Thus sex and the law varies from place to place.

Sexual acts which are prohibited by law in a jurisdiction, are also called sex crimes.

Contents

[hide]

* 1 Age of consent

* 2 Sex crimes

o 2.1 Common sex crimes

o 2.2 Acts which may be regarded as crimes in some areas

* 3 See also

* 4 External links

[edit] Age of consent

Main article: Age of consent

Many cultures, and all developed cultures, have established an age of consent, an age at which even if consent is given, sexual activity by an older person with a person under that age will be punished severely. The aim of an age of consent law is to protect impressionable young people, as they develop and mature.

[edit] Sex crimes

Sex crimes are forms of human sexual behavior that are crimes. Someone who commits one is said to be a sex offender. Some sex crimes are crimes of violence that involve sex. Others are violations of social taboos, such as incest, indecent exposure or exhibitionism. There is much variation among cultures as to what is considered a crime or not, and in what ways or to what extent crimes are punished.

Western cultures are often far more tolerant of acts, such as oral sex or cross-dressing, that have traditionally been held to be crimes in some other cultures, but combine this with lesser tolerance for the remaining crimes. By contrast, many cultures with a strong religious tradition consider a far broader range of activities to be serious crimes.

As a general rule, the law in many countries often intervenes in sexual activity involving young or adolescent children below the legal age of consent, nonconsensual deliberate displays or illicit watching of sexual activity, sex with close relatives ("incest"), harm to animals, acts involving dead people, and also when there is harassment, nuisance, fear, injury, or assault of a sexual nature, or serious risk of abuse of certain professional relationships. Separately, it also usually regulates or controls the censorship of pornographic or obscene material.

[edit] Common sex crimes

The activities listed below often carry a condition of illegality if acted upon, though they may usually be legally role-played between consenting partners:

* Rape, lust murder and other forms of sexual assault and sexual abuse

* Pedophilia: sexual attraction to prepubescent children, in the form of child sexual abuse or child molestation.

* Ephebophilia: sexual attraction to adolescents (ie, postpubescent youth, such as teenagers)

* Frotteurism: sexual arousal through rubbing one's self against a non-consenting stranger in public

* Exhibitionism and voyeurism, if deliberate and non-consensual, called "indecent exposure" and "peeping tom" respectively in this context.

* Incest between close relatives - laws on what is permitted and not permitted vary widely.

* Telephone scatologia: being sexually aroused by making obscene telephone calls

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