France is moving to abolish the legal concept of a marital duty to have sex. The proposed change seeks to remove the implied obligation for spouses to engage in sexual relations. This legislative action aims to formally separate the institution of marriage from any automatic presumption of sexual consent. The development represents a significant shift in how the law views the boundaries of personal autonomy within marriage. The move is part of a broader legal recalibration concerning consent and bodily integrity.
France Moves to Abolish Marital Duty to Have Sex
This legal shift in a major Western nation could influence global conversations about consent and marriage, relevant to Nigerian legal and social debates.



