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Francis Bennion
Francis Alan Roscoe Bennion (2 January 1923 – 28 January 2015) was a barrister in the United Kingdom, and lecturer in law at the University of Oxford from 1984 until his retirement in 2002. Francis Bennion was the author of several leading UK legal texts, sometimes working as Parliamentary Counsel and drafting various Acts of Parliament, such as the Sex Discrimination Act 1975. In relation to MAPs, AAMs, and debates around pedophilia and children's sexuality, Bennion wrote about age-gap sexual contact throughout his life, and would eventually dedicate much effort to criticizing then-burgeoning UK sex offence law. His writings such as The Sex Code: Morals for Moderns (1991), and Sexual Ethics and Criminal Law: A Critique of the Sexual Offences Bill 2003 (March, 2003), and many more which will be detailed here, criticized the sex negativity and harmful / ineffective sex laws emerging in the UK.
Bennion was, at one time, a member of the executive committee of the Defence of Literature and the Arts Society (UK).[1]
Francis Bennion on the Age of Consent, Age-Gap Sex, and Sex Offence Law
Bennion had written about unlawful age-gap sex since at least the 1970s, having reviewed Parker Rossman's
Selected Writings
References
- ↑ Francis Bennion, The Libertine Trial (1977).