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Physical integrity as an object of control of a person’s free will

Volkova Alina Yur'evna

ORCID: 0000-0003-1944-3453

PhD in Law

Senior lecturer; Department of Criminal and Penal Enforcement Law; Nizhny Novgorod Academy of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation

603950, Russia, Nizhny Novgorod region, Nizhny Novgorod, Ankudinovskoe highway, 3

auvolkovs@mail.ru
Other publications by this author
 

 

DOI:

10.7256/2454-0692.2024.4.71274

EDN:

UCOLIM

Received:

17-07-2024


Published:

05-09-2024


Abstract: Physical integrity as a subjective right of every person, meaning a ban on any external influence that may violate the physical integrity of a person. This right is closely related to the right to freedom and personal integrity, which are guaranteed by the Constitution of the Russian Federation and protected by the current criminal law. The subject of the study is the physical integrity of the individual as a specific object of criminal legal protection from any forms of physical and other forms of violence. The purpose of the study is a comprehensive presentation of physical integrity as an object of the will of a person to clearly demonstrate the need to improve criminal legislation in terms of protecting the said subject. The development of certain areas of life associated with one or another restriction/interference in the physical integrity of a person requires proper coverage in the doctrine of criminal law. In the course of the study, the following work results were obtained: the author’s interpretation of physical integrity as an independent object of criminal law protection was given, the modern realities of a person’s disposal of physical integrity in various spheres of public life were analyzed, the boundaries of a person’s disposal of the named object were determined, and prospects for the development of legislation defining those or other areas of control over a person’s own physical integrity. The results obtained have scientific novelty due to the fact that they generalize the intersectoral nature of the legal regulation of physical integrity of the individual and can be applied in the practical activities of various government bodies, when improving regulatory regulation in the designated areas, as well as within the framework of conferences, meetups, hackathons, the activities of which is of an educational nature on the topic of research.


Keywords:

physical integrity, person's consent, dispositive principles, criminal law, personal protection, medical interventions, reproductive rights, public danger, substantive law, crime

This article is automatically translated. You can find original text of the article here.

Introduction. The protection of the individual, including his physical integrity, is the primary task of international law and domestic legislation, which emphasizes the importance of personal autonomy, self-control and self-determination of a person with his own body. Physical inviolability as an integral element of personal inviolability is recognized as an object of criminal law protection - when committing a crime, harm is caused to legitimate interests that are inalienable and inseparable from the right to life as such: the physical, mental and moral well-being of the individual. All the rights that make up the physical integrity of a person are grouped into the category of somatic: it is their totality that, according to N.N. Podolnaya, presupposes the realization of body functions and determines the quality of life of each individual [1, p. 92].

In certain situations, a person independently puts the above-mentioned benefits in a situation of threat of harm: medical interventions, including artificial termination of pregnancy, sports injuries, surrogacy, injectable cosmetology, etc. Thus, somatic rights in aggregate should be considered as an object of disposal of a person's free will: in case of harm with permission or at the request of a person, it is possible to choose from the behavioral options available to him, i.e. in this case, to sacrifice his rights and freedoms [2, pp. 193-194]. The dynamic development of certain spheres of life necessitates an improved approach to regulating the physical integrity of the individual, that is, the possibility of disposing of it as an object of a person's free will.

The results of the study. The physical integrity of the individual is understood quite broadly: the life of the individual, his physical and mental health, including the right to sexual self-determination and reproductive rights. According to the provision of Part 1 of Article 22 of the Constitution of the Russian Federation, "everyone has the right to personal inviolability," where physical inviolability is only an integral part of it. This characterizes the following: personal inviolability is a substantive right provided for by both domestic and international legislation, and physical inviolability is an integral element of it. Within the framework of the study, possible cases of disposing of physical integrity to harm a person's own personal integrity are of interest.

The physical integrity of a person has the status of an object of criminal law protection. In all spheres, physical integrity, as a component of personal integrity, is an intangible good. According to I.A. Fast, this intangible benefit is of a system-forming nature, including mechanisms for unhindered implementation and proper protection [3, p. 184].

Regarding the protection of this intangible benefit, the public nature of criminal legal relations underlies the recognition of actions as socially dangerous and encroaching on the rights previously mentioned and forming the physical integrity of the individual as a whole. In some actions, there is a legal assessment of the will of the individual, which underlies the non-punishability of the act and the reduction of the degree of public danger. Thus, the expression of an individual's will distinguishes between Articles 131 and 134 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation, exempts an HIV-infected person from criminal liability in Articles 122 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation, determines the punishability of actions related to illegal termination of pregnancy in Articles 111 and 123 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation, etc. In the examples given, a person voluntarily and consciously agrees to undergo the consequences of his choice, thereby disposing of his physical integrity.

I would like to outline the response measures of the State and individual subjects of the Russian Federation to the possibility of self-determination of the mother during childbirth. Thus, in the Komi Republic, already the tenth region of Russia, along with the Novgorod and Tver regions, administrative responsibility for inducing artificial termination of pregnancy has been introduced over the past year and a half, thereby preventing the restriction of the free will of a pregnant girl within such a difficult choice.

But in contrast to such measures in the subjects of the Russian Federation, it is necessary to highlight the situation in the United States of America, where in some states women's right to abortion was restricted, that infant mortality in Texas increased by almost 13% in the year after the adoption of Bill 8 of the Texas Senate, from 1985 in 2021 to 2,240 in 2022 [4].

Two state measures of the State response to the possibility of artificial termination of pregnancy reflect the consequences of restrictions on freedom in terms of a woman's decision-making related to the disposal of her physical integrity.

In accordance with the norms of foreign and international legislation, physical integrity is interpreted much more broadly: autonomy and self-determination in relation to one's body, the inadmissibility of any physical interference or pressure on a decision regarding natural physiological processes, as this is considered a violation of human rights and freedoms. And a special difficulty arises with non-standard forms of acts that violate the physical integrity of a person: illegal artificial insemination or embryo implantation, limited access to contraceptives, taking human genetic material, conducting experiments on a person, etc. Non-standard approaches to sexual identification also give rise to disputes regarding the disposal of physical integrity, especially in childhood. The norms concerning medical interventions in sexual anatomy in connection with intersex variations have not been codified in international law, and most countries have not adopted any legislation to ensure these rights. But a number of authors are trying to illustrate potential ways to eliminate legal gaps in the protection of all children's rights to physical integrity and (future) physical and sexual autonomy [5].

In the above-mentioned cases of encroachments on the physical integrity of a person, the decisive role is played by the freedom of will of a person in the disposal of certain somatic rights. But even the existence of a person's free will, obtaining the consent of a person in accordance with the procedure established by law and the production of these procedures requires their comprehensive assessment, taking into account the norms of morality and current legislation, as well as religious beliefs. These criteria form certain boundaries for the production of encroachments on the physical integrity of a person based on legal regulation and ethical permissibility.

In domestic realities, the issues of the realization of the right to sexual self-determination, including sexual education, are topical and are understood through the prism of violations of equal rights and equal opportunities of people on the basis of sexual and gender differences. This ignores the provisions of the Declaration of the World Association for Sexual Health, which asserts that sexual rights are based on universal human rights, which are already recognized in international and regional human rights documents, in constitutions and laws, legal norms and principles (Declaration of Sexual Rights by the World Association for Sexual Health (WAS): proclaimed on the 13that the World Congress of Sexologists in Valencia, Spain, in 1997 // Access mode: URL: https://worldsexualhealth.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/DSR-Russian.pdf (date of application: 07/15/2024).

The topic of sexual violence borders on the problem of domestic violence, which encroaches on the physical integrity of the individual. Countering these types of violence should be carried out institutionally: only the unity of their prevention and subsequent serious measures of responsibility will reduce the number of attacks on the inviolability of the individual as an object of criminal law protection.

The development of international legislation, for example, the Council of Europe Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence against Women and Domestic Violence (Istanbul Convention), which aims to protect women from all forms of violence, establishes the principle of free will of a person in the disposal of their physical integrity (Council of Europe Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence against Women and domestic violence. Istanbul, 11.V.2011 // Council of Europe Treaty Series No. 210. 36 p.).

In the case of exclusion of a person's free will in the form of voluntary freely expressed consent to an action against him, the specified normative document requires mandatory criminal prosecution. Thus, the principle of consent or its absence is the basis for punishability of attacks on the physical integrity of a person.

Articles 2 and 3 of the Law on Combating Prostitution in Japan defines prostitution and its punishable nature if a person engages in sexual intercourse with an unidentified partner for payment or promise to receive payment (The Law of Japan "On Combating Prostitution" dated May 24, 1956, as amended. Law No. 52 of 2022. // E-Gov ポーーールル URL: https://elaws.e-gov.go.jp/document?lawid=331AC0000000118 (date of application: 07/15/2024).

Thus, a person disposes of his physical integrity at his discretion when providing services of an intimate nature. The current domestic criminal law in Article 240 assumes responsibility for coercion into prostitution, including violent methods of involvement, thereby the guilty person violates the physical integrity of the individual in terms of the disposal of his own sexual freedom.

The explanatory report to the Istanbul Convention clarifies that prosecution "will require a contextual assessment of evidence in order to determine in each case whether the victim has the opportunity to freely consent to sexual intercourse without violence or threat of violence. This assessment should take into account the wide range of behavioral responses to sexual violence demonstrated by the victim and should not be based on assumptions about typical behavior in such situations. Consent is voluntary and permanent to participate in certain sexual relationships, but can be revoked at any time (for example: The High Court of England and Wales in the case of R v. DPP and "A". [2013] EWHC 945 (Admin); California Supreme Court, 29 Cal. 4th 756, 60 P.3d 183, 128 Cal. RPTR. 2d 783, 2003 Cal.)

In addition to the physical integrity of a person affecting her sexual rights, cases of voluntary suffering of harm characterized by an ambiguous psychological nature of origin require proper legal assessment: there are cases of apothemnophilia, also known as transability or transformability – this is a syndrome of violation of the integrity of perception of one's own body (body integrity identity disorder (BIID)), when diagnosing it, a person is concerned about the desire to amputate a healthy limb. According to the International Classification of Diseases adopted by WHO, this dysphoria belongs to the number of mental disorders, behavioral disorders or nervous development (ICD-11- International Classification of Diseases 11th Revision // World Health Organization, 2019. – Access mode: ICD API [website]. URL: https://icd.who.int/browse11/l-m/en#/http://id.who.int/icd/entity/256572629 (date of application: 07/16/2024). Patients suffering from BIID are aware of the discrepancy between their actual and assumed body schema, and they feel that being disabled is a necessary and important aspect of their personality [6, p. 1407]. This disorder is interpreted as a voluntary desire of a person to become disabled, which leads to harmful consequences manifested in the obsession of this idea, significantly affects productivity, leisure or any other social functioning, as a person exposes his health and life to serious danger.

Since the WHO has classified this disorder as a disease, satisfying a person's desire to violate the integrity of their body is not legitimate and socially acceptable. This is due to illegal cases of amputation to a person suffering from a similar disorder. In such a case, the voluntary expression of a person's will to violate physical integrity does not matter when deciding on the responsibility of the person who carried out the illegal medical intervention. In accordance with domestic legislation, there is no such diagnosis, the specified disorder does not have a legal status, therefore, a medical worker or other person who satisfies a person's desire to amputate a healthy limb will be criminally liable on general grounds, and his actions will be qualified depending on the intent of the harmer and the socially dangerous consequences that have occurred. A similar legal assessment is given to the conduct of FGM on the territory of the Russian Federation related to the change of a person's gender identity. Although the boundaries of the dispositive legal regulation of such actions should be determined using a multidisciplinary approach. According to experts, the main problems of this area concern a number of bioethical dilemmas, diagnostic difficulties, and methodological problems [7, p. 26].

Conclusions. Freedom of action, awareness of choice and the ability to make it – this perfectly characterizes the disposal of a person's rights and legitimate interests within the framework of modern public relations, where the expression of a person's will can often be implemented in illegal ways. A person's awareness of the complex of his rights and freedoms that constitute physical integrity and their specifics will contribute to more effective implementation and protection by the state.

Physical integrity should be understood as a person's right to personal autonomy of his own body, which implies the protection of his physical, mental and moral well-being. The State's protection of the physical integrity of citizens in accordance with the requirements of international and domestic legislation makes it possible to assess violations of the physical integrity of another person as unethical and, in extreme cases, criminal acts.

In case of possible restriction of personal freedom in terms of disposing of one's physical integrity, the legislator must foresee the possible consequences of such a decision, including criminal ways of carrying out certain medical interventions in the future of certain prohibitions.

Doctrine, legislation and law enforcement practice should consistently and reasonably approach the legal assessment of situations involving violation of a person's physical integrity by his voluntary and conscious expression of will, which determines the degree of punishability of actions against a person who expressed such a will, regardless of the scope of such expression.

References
1. Podolnaya, N.N. (2021). Criminal policy in the field of protection of reproductive rights from criminal attacks. Science. Society. State, 2(34), 88-97.
2. Sheveleva, S.V. (2015). Free will and coercion in criminal law: dis. ... doctor of Law. Moscow.
3. Fast, I.A. (2019). Personal integrity. Bulletin of UNN, 1, 182-186.
4. Ely, D.M., & Driscoll, A.K. (2023). Infant Mortality in the United States: Provisional Data from the 2022 Period Linked Birth/Infant Death File. Vital Statistics Rapid Release report from the National Center for Health Statistics, 33, november. Retrieved from https://www.cdc.gov/
5. DeLaet, D.L., Earp, B.D., & Mills, E. (2024) Which Children Have Rights? The Child’s Right to Bodily Integrity and Protection Gaps for Children with Intersex Traits under International and National Laws. Special Section: Children's Rights: Contemporary Issues in Law and Society (Part 2). Amicus Curiae, Series 2, Vol 5, 3, 448-473.
6. Milovanovic, S., Duisin, D., Jerinic, M., & Barisic, J. (2015) Recommendations for the Treatment of Persons with Body Integrity Identity Disorder (BIID) ). European Psychiatry, Volume 30, Supplement 1, 1407.
7. Yagubov, M.I., Starostina, E.A., Dobaeva, N.V., & Ichmelyan, M.A. (2022) Gender incongruence: clinical, psychological and therapeutic aspects. Medical Bulletin of the South of Russia, 13(3), 21-31.

Peer Review

Peer reviewers' evaluations remain confidential and are not disclosed to the public. Only external reviews, authorized for publication by the article's author(s), are made public. Typically, these final reviews are conducted after the manuscript's revision. Adhering to our double-blind review policy, the reviewer's identity is kept confidential.
The list of publisher reviewers can be found here.

A REVIEW of an article on the topic "Physical integrity as an object of disposition of a person's free will". The subject of the study. The article proposed for review is devoted to topical issues of physical integrity in the context of the possibility of its disposal by the will of a person. The author examines the problems of determining the essence of physical integrity, interpreting the norms of Russian legislation, as well as international law on the protection of physical integrity, and draws fundamental conclusions about how to limit a person's free will regarding the disposal of the right to physical integrity. The specific subject of the study was, first of all, the provisions of the legislation of Russia and foreign countries, the opinions of scientists and practice materials. Research methodology. The purpose of the study is not stated directly in the article. At the same time, it can be clearly understood from the title and content of the work. The purpose can be designated as the consideration and resolution of certain problematic aspects of the issue of physical integrity in the context of the possibility of its disposal by the will of a person. Based on the set goals and objectives, the author has chosen the methodological basis of the study. In particular, the author uses a set of general scientific methods of cognition: analysis, synthesis, analogy, deduction, induction, and others. In particular, the methods of analysis and synthesis made it possible to summarize and share the conclusions of various scientific approaches to the proposed topic, as well as draw specific conclusions from the materials of practice. The most important role was played by special legal methods. In particular, the author actively applied the formal legal method, which made it possible to analyze and interpret the norms of the current legislation of Russia and its subjects. For example, the following conclusion of the author: "Regarding the protection of this intangible good, the public nature of criminal legal relations underlies the recognition of actions as socially dangerous and encroaching on the rights previously mentioned and forming the physical integrity of the individual as a whole. In some actions, there is a legal assessment of the will of the individual, which underlies the non-punishability of the act and the reduction of the degree of public danger. Thus, the expression of an individual's will distinguishes between Articles 131 and 134 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation, exempts an HIV-infected person from criminal liability in Articles 122 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation, determines the punishability of actions related to illegal termination of pregnancy in Articles 111 and 123 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation, etc. In the examples given, a person voluntarily and consciously agrees to undergo the consequences of his choice, thereby disposing of his physical integrity. I would like to outline the response measures of the State and individual subjects of the Russian Federation to the possibility of self-determination of the mother during childbirth. So, in the Komi Republic, already the tenth region of Russia, along with the Novgorod and Tver regions, administrative responsibility for inducing artificial termination of pregnancy has been introduced over the past year and a half, thereby preventing the restriction of the free will of a pregnant girl within such a difficult choice." I would like to positively assess the possibilities of the comparative legal research method, which made it possible to compare regulation in Russia and other countries. In particular, the following conclusion seems important in the context of the study: "in contrast to such measures in the subjects of the Russian Federation, it is necessary to highlight the situation in the United States of America, where in some states women's right to abortion was restricted, that infant mortality in Texas increased by almost 13% in the year after the adoption of Bill 8 of the Texas Senate, since 1985 in 2021 to 2240 in 2022 [4]. Two state measures of the state response to the possibility of artificial termination of pregnancy reflect the consequences of restricting freedom in terms of a woman's decision-making related to the disposal of her physical integrity." Thus, the methodology chosen by the author is fully adequate to the purpose of the study, allows you to study all aspects of the topic in its entirety. Relevance. The relevance of the stated issues is beyond doubt. There are both theoretical and practical aspects of the significance of the proposed topic. From the point of view of theory, the topic of physical integrity in the context of the possibility of its disposal by the will of a person is complex and ambiguous. The topic concerns both legal, philosophical, and moral aspects, which is reflected in scientific conclusions, as well as legal regulation. It is difficult to argue with the author that "The protection of the individual, including his physical integrity, is the primary task of international law and domestic legislation, which emphasizes the importance of personal autonomy, self-control and self-determination of a person with his own body. Physical inviolability as an integral element of personal inviolability is recognized as an object of criminal law protection - when committing a crime, harm is caused to legitimate interests that are inalienable and inseparable from the right to life as such: the physical, mental and moral well-being of the individual. All the rights that make up the physical integrity of a person are grouped into the category of somatic: it is their totality that, according to N.N. Podolnaya, presupposes the realization of body functions and determines the quality of life of each individual [1, p. 92]. In certain situations, a person independently puts the above-mentioned benefits in a situation of threat of harm: medical interventions, including artificial termination of pregnancy, sports injuries, surrogacy, injectable cosmetology, etc. Thus, somatic rights in aggregate should be considered as an object of disposal of the person's free will: in case of harm with the permission or at the request of the person, it is possible to choose from the behavioral options available to him, i.e. in this case, to sacrifice his rights and freedoms [2, pp. 193-194]. The dynamic development of certain spheres of life necessitates an improved approach to regulating the physical integrity of the individual, that is, the possibility of disposing of it as an object of a person's free will." Thus, scientific research in the proposed field should only be welcomed. Scientific novelty. The scientific novelty of the proposed article is beyond doubt. Firstly, it is expressed in the author's specific conclusions. Among them, for example, is the following conclusion: "Physical integrity should be understood as a person's right to personal autonomy of his own body, implying the protection of his physical, mental and moral well-being. The state's protection of the physical integrity of citizens in accordance with the requirements of international and domestic legislation makes it possible to assess violations of the physical integrity of another person as unethical and, in extreme cases, criminal acts." These and other theoretical conclusions can be used in further scientific research. Secondly, the author suggests ideas for improving the current legislation. In particular, "In case of possible restriction of personal freedom in terms of disposing of one's physical integrity, the legislator must foresee the possible consequences of such a decision, including criminal ways of carrying out certain medical interventions in the future of certain prohibitions. Doctrine, legislation and law enforcement practice should consistently and reasonably approach the legal assessment of situations involving violation of a person's physical integrity by his voluntary and conscious expression of will, which determines the degree of punishability of actions against a person who expressed such a will, regardless of the scope of such expression." The above conclusion may be relevant and useful for law-making activities. Thus, the materials of the article may be of particular interest to the scientific community in terms of contributing to the development of science. Style, structure, content.
The subject of the article corresponds to the specialization of the journal "Police Activity", as it is devoted to legal problems related to the protection of human physical integrity. The content of the article fully corresponds to the title, as the author has considered the stated problems, and has generally achieved the stated research goal. The quality of the presentation of the study and its results should be recognized as fully positive. The subject, objectives, methodology and main results of the study follow directly from the text of the article. The design of the work generally meets the requirements for this kind of work. No significant violations of these requirements were found. Bibliography. The quality of the literature used should be highly appreciated. The author actively uses the literature presented by authors from Russia and abroad (Podolnaya N.N., Sheveleva S.V., Fast I.A., Ely Danielle M., Driscoll Anne K. and others). Thus, the works of the above authors correspond to the research topic, have a sign of sufficiency, and contribute to the disclosure of various aspects of the topic. Appeal to opponents. The author conducted a serious analysis of the current state of the problem under study. All quotes from scientists are accompanied by author's comments. That is, the author shows different points of view on the problem and tries to argue for a more correct one in his opinion. Conclusions, the interest of the readership. The conclusions are fully logical, as they are obtained using a generally accepted methodology. The article may be of interest to the readership in terms of the systematic positions of the author in relation to the stated problems. Based on the above, summing up all the positive and negative sides of the article, "I recommend publishing"