Deception, Consent and the Law
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'Chlo Kennedy's new monograph breaks new ground by considering the law's response to deceptively induced intimacy across both civil and criminal law over more than two centuries. It demonstrates enormous breadth of research and aligns analytical rigour with sensitivity to the human stories to which the law has been required to respond. The broad sweep of Kennedy's work allows for modern day laws to be understood in their fullest context.' James Chalmers, Regius Professor of Law, University of Glasgow
'What role should the law (civil or criminal) play in responding to the various kinds of deception that people use to induce intimate relationships? Kennedy offers a rich and fascinating historical exploration of the ways in which this question has been answered, and of the shifting cultural and ethical understandings of such relationships that underpin those answers; and she suggests a fruitful way of tackling this question in our contemporary culture, by examining the ways in which such deceptions impinge on identity and self-construction.' Antony Duff, Emeritus Professor, University of Stirling
'This book makes a massive contribution to our understanding of the relationship between deception and intimate relationships. While most work in this area focuses mainly on recent developments in the criminal law relating to deceptively induced sexual relationships, by taking a longer historical view and including private law in the scope of her study, Kennedy is able to shed important new light on this area. This is a tremendous book, a major contribution to legal and historical scholarship, and deserves to be widely read.' Lindsay Farmer, Professor of Law, University of Glasgow
'Inducing Intimacy is an impressive and important book. Ranging widely over civil and criminal laws, and drawing a rich history up to the present day, this book offers a truly fresh examination of the intricate issues relating to deception in intimate relations, now one of the most significant if controversial parts of sexual offending. Inducing Intimacy deserves to be read widely, by scholars and students, but also by policy-makers and activists.' Arlie Loughnan, Professor of Criminal Law and Criminal Law Theory, University of Sydney
'Chlo Kennedy's imaginative and meticulously argued book breaks new ground by situating its analysis of deceptive sex within the broader canvas of law's construction of induced intimacy from the mid 18th Century to the present day. Encompassing both criminal and civil law responses, this highly original book is a model of socio-legal history, and one which has important implications for law's treatment of induced intimacy today.' Nicola Lacey, Professor of Law, Gender and Social Policy, London School of Economics
Chlo Kennedy is Professor of Law and History at the School of Law, University of Edinburgh. She has published widely in the areas of criminal law, legal history, legal theory, and law and gender. She is the co-editor of two books - Scottish Feminist Judgments: (Re)Creating Law from the Outside In (Hart, 2019) and Leading Works in Criminal Law (Routledge, 2023). Inducing Intimacy: Deception, Consent and the Law is the product of a research fellowship Chlo was awarded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council.
1. Inducing intimacy: an introduction; Part I. Marriage: 2. Making Marriage; 3. Promising Marriage; 4. Faking Marriage; Part II. Sex: 5. Eliciting Sex; 6. Procuring Sex; 7. Imposing Sex; 8. Inducing intimacy: a conclusion.