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  • ECHR Blog

    • By Margarita S. Ilieva
      Introduction
      On 4 September 2025, the European Court of Human Rights (the Court) rendered a landmark judgment in E.A. and Association europ茅enne contre les violences faites aux femmes au travail v. France. For the first time, the Court: 1) mapped criteria to determine lacking consent in sexual violence (SV) cases; 2) used, and defined, coercive control in sexual relationships; 3) established that a coercive control context is relevant to determining consent; 4) held that using past agreement coerced in a controlling relationship to derive consent to sex acts is victim blaming (鈥榗ulpabilisant, stigmatisant鈥), and, therefore, revictimisation barring victims鈥 access to justice. Yet, as in the other three cases of workplace sexual harassment, the Court ignored the crux of the matter, namely, gender discrimination.
       
      After summarising the facts and the judgment, I will discuss this and other gaps, as well as the precedential value of E.A., against the backdrop of earlier SV cases.
       
      Facts
       
      E.A. suffered coercive control in a violent sexual relationship with a supervisor. She was 26 years old, an assistant pharmacist in training, on temporary contract. Her abuser, the department head, was 16 years older. (搂搂4-5, 7-8, 65) Their relationship was sadomasochistic, with E.A. receiving severe and frequent degrading treatment, beating, and forced sexual acts, including anal penetration. (搂20) She suffered bleeding, bruises, inflammation, and pain while walking. (搂28) He had her sign a 鈥榗ontract between the master and his bitch鈥, which listed her 鈥榙uties鈥 to:
      鈥榬egularly suck her master鈥; wear a collar; accept to be 鈥榝ucked by others in the presence of her master鈥; inform her 鈥榤aster鈥 when going out and wear a 鈥榗hastity belt鈥; 鈥榯ake care of/ massage her master鈥檚 dick鈥; act 鈥榦bedient and devoted to her master鈥; wear clothes, underwear, and makeup chosen by her 鈥榤aster鈥; eat from a bowl at her 鈥榤aster鈥檚 feet鈥; 鈥榩ee with the door open for her master to hear daily鈥; send her 鈥榤aster鈥 a daily photo with her underwear lowered; send him her daily agenda; take beatings on her behind when not respecting his 鈥榦rders鈥; and more. (搂11) 
      That contract had the abuser鈥檚 professional seal as head on it. (搂11)
       
      The abuser had established domination over her, keeping her in dependency. He demanded sex at work and that she say she was his 鈥榮hit鈥. He urinated on her to 鈥榤ark his territory鈥 and forced her to use an email address entitled chiennkb@laposte.net (鈥榖itch[his initials]鈥). E.A. unsuccessfully tried to break up, which exacerbated his professional harassment of her. (搂21) He threatened her with professional consequences and often devalued and humiliated her before colleagues. (搂搂15, 25, 30)
       
      E.A. feared his influence on her professional future, including regarding a procedure to obtain permanent employment. With a fixed-term contract, she risked having to cover her tuition鈥檚 cost if she left. (搂26)
       
      E.A. was diagnosed with severe PTSD and depression and placed on indefinite medical leave. (搂搂9, 22) She was hospitalised in a psychiatry for a long period. She was assessed as 鈥榙estroyed in terms of psychological balance鈥, displaying 鈥榟ostage syndrome鈥, with symptoms typical of SV victims. The psychiatrist stressed that her vulnerability could not be unknown to her abuser. (搂37)
       
      During the ensuing criminal investigation, another expert confirmed E.A.鈥檚 symptoms and her relationship with the abuser being sadomasochistic and coercively controlling. The abuser had disbalanced and plunged E.A. in significant moral distress. Her statements matched her emotional state. (搂51)
       
      The abuser was investigated for violence and sexual harassment abusing a position of authority. (搂44) However, the investigators failed to pursue the rapes and other SV E.A. complained of. (搂65) The abuser was brought before a tribunal incompetent to hear rape cases. (搂58) While the first instance convicted him, the appeals court fully acquitted him, relying on E.A.鈥檚 鈥榗onsent鈥 given in the 鈥榤aster-bitch contract鈥. (搂搂66, 71-3) The last instance refused to reexamine this. (搂76)
       
      Judgment
       
      The Court reaffirmed that an investigation into alleged SV must focus on (lacking) consent. Consent must express free will at the moment sex is occurring. (搂140) The authorities have a duty to examine all the facts and determine consent based on their entirety, carrying out a contextual analysis. (搂搂141-2)
       
      Importantly, the Court listed factors for lacking consent:
       
      - an unbalanced relationship between accused and victim;
      - victim鈥檚 youth/ age disparity;
      - victim鈥檚 psychological fragility/ particular vulnerability, her capacity for judgment, (lack of) sexual experience, or drunken/ intoxicated state;
      - any 鈥榝reezing鈥 during the acts;
      - the acts鈥 impact on victim;
      - perpetrator aware of her vulnerability, and/ or using a relationship of trust or status; circumstances conducive to coercion, such as deserted place or multiple aggressors. (搂143)   
       
      Regarding SV in professional contexts, the Court reiterated that power imbalances (victim鈥檚 position of subordination) are an important contextual element when assessing a victim鈥檚 behaviour. (搂145)
       
      The Court reiterated that French criminal law is inadequate to protect against non-consensual sex acts (see, for a similar finding, L. et Autres c. France (2025) analysed here). Relying on GREVIO, it found French rape law to be deficient as the provisions did not refer to 鈥榗onsent鈥 (搂148-9) The Court noted a growing European consensus to expressly define rape and SV by  lacking informed consent. The legislation must provide for criteria to evaluate free will. (搂150)
      Furthermore, the authorities failed to implement the law in practice: effective investigation and punishment for the perpetrator was lacking. E.A.鈥檚 complaint contained credible (anal) rape and other SV allegations, which were not investigated despite their particular gravity. (搂搂153-4) The investigation took insufficient account of the control exercised by the abuser and the severe impact on E.A.鈥檚 health. It was crucial to assess whether such circumstances allowed free consent. (搂搂156-9) The courts refused to consider rape and SV charges as no 鈥榲iolence, constraint, threat, or surprise鈥 was proven, in their view. Despite acknowledging E.A.鈥檚 fragility and her aggressor鈥檚 abuse of professional status, his professional threats, and his aggressive humiliation of her in professional situations, which had all eroded E.A.鈥檚 health and caused her to submit to him, they did not draw any conclusions from that context regarding her 鈥榗onsent鈥. (搂161)
      The facts had to be assessed in their professional context. (搂165) The abuser exercised functional authority over E.A., his post giving him real power over her. E.A. was a young professional whose employment status depended on her success in a competition, which her abuser had threatened to intervene in. He was vindictive towards her and used his status to discredit and isolate her professionally. (搂165)   
       
      Moreover, the sexual acts had a context of repeated psychological violence, including increasing humiliation. The abuser exercised growing surveillance over E.A.鈥檚 daily life and deliberately used emotional ambivalence towards her. Importantly, the ECtHR characterised this as coercive control, defining it as an entirety of behaviours typical of relationships marked by domination in which one individual aims to persistently control their partner and their partner鈥檚 life affecting their psychological integrity and personal autonomy. (搂166) The Court relied on GREVIO reports discussing such control in intimate partner violence contexts. It noted that coercive control is likely to render the victim particularly vulnerable, affecting their judgment. An authority had found that the abuser had 鈥榚xtremely significant hold鈥 over E.A. (搂166) However, the courts had failed to take into account her professional vulnerability and the major deterioration of her mental health, causing her psychiatric hospitalisation for many months. (搂167-8)   
       
      Importantly, the Court concluded that the manner in which the courts had imputed consent to E.A. based on the 鈥榤aster-bitch contract鈥 amounted to her secondary victimisation. (搂170) It stressed that no manner of past agreement, including a written contract, is capable of amounting to consent, consent being by nature revocable. The courts should have completely ignored the 鈥榗ontract鈥 between E.A. and her abuser. (搂169)    
       
      Indeed, the Court held, the 鈥榤aster-bitch contract鈥 which the abuser made E.A. sign was one of the instruments of his coercive control. By holding her signature against her, the courts had exposed E.A. to secondary victimisation. Such reasoning was guilt-inducing, stigmatising, and liable to dissuade SV victims from enforcing their rights. The authorities had failed their duty to protect E.A.鈥檚 dignity. (搂170)    
       
      In conclusion, the gaps in the domestic legislation and the deficiencies in its implementation - among others, excluding SV from the investigation and misinterpreting E.A.鈥檚 consent - amounted to a failure of the state to meet its positive duties to address sexual violence in violation of Articles 3 and 8 ECHR. (搂171)    
       
      Commentary
       
      E.A. is a future-relevant precedent. The ECtHR has significantly developed rape and sexual harassment law under the ECHR by setting out illustrative conditions in which free, informed consent should be found lacking. It has integrated the notion of coercive control in sexual relationships as an important aspect of the requisite contextual analysis when assessing consent. Now explicitly under ECHR law, a coercive control context exacerbates a victim鈥檚 vulnerability affecting her ability to freely consent. Furthermore, the Court has built on its acknowledgment that only present consent is consent, now also outside of marriage contexts.
      (See H.W. v. France (2025) for the first holding that only present consent is relevant: contrary to what the Govt had asserted before the Court (!), consent to marriage could not imply consent to future sex; enforcing 鈥榤arital duties鈥 went against the duty to combat sexual violence, including marital rape (搂91).)
      E.A. is a landmark, recognising that, for judges to use past consent, especially in a coercive control context, in order to construct consent to a sexual act is revictimisation, blaming survivors and discouraging them from reporting SV. The Court has explicitly grounded the duty to refrain from such victim stigmatisation in respect for victims鈥 dignity, using dignity-based analysis to uphold victims鈥 rights.
      E.A. is only the third case of SV impunity, after L. v. France and J.L. v. Italy, in which the Court has recognised judicial victim-shaming and blaming (鈥榞uilt-inducing and stigmatising鈥 reasons) as revictimisation and a breach of the ECHR per se. In two other cases, respectively, workplace sexual harassment and online violence by a former partner (revenge porn), the Court recognised negative gender stereotyping as stigmatising and revictimising, however, in a limited manner and not as a separate breach (M.葮.D. v. Romania, 搂147-8, see commentaryC v. Romania, 搂83-5, see commentary).
      E.A. is a solid advancement compared to all these cases, as the Court found revictimisation based on mere imputation of consent, with no additional misogynist language, while in the earlier cases there had been offensive stereotyping and sexist insults/ humiliating remarks as well. 
      On the other hand, unlike L. v. France, but like earlier cases of judicial victim-blaming of SV survivors, in which the Court, despite finding revictimisation, simply refused to address discrimination complaints (commentary on this), E.A.ignores gender inequality as the root cause of such revictimisation. E.A. made no discrimination allegation, possibly influenced by the Court鈥檚 tendency to dismiss such allegations as 鈥榰nnecessary鈥 (M.葮.D. v. Romania, J.L. v. Italy) or as requiring evidence for Article 14 to even apply (C v. Romania). However, under international law, sexual harassment/ violence is unquestionably gendered. Under the Istanbul Convention (IC), sexual harassment is a form of violence against women (VAW). 
      Equally, under EU law, including the VAW Directive, criminal sexual harassment is a form of VAW. Under the gender equality directives (2006/54/EC, 2010/41/EU), sexual harassment constitutes sex discrimination. Under the Victims鈥 Directive, sexual harassment is a form of GBV.     
       
      Under ILO Convention 190, sexual harassment is included in GBV and gender-based harassment. Under CEDAW, sexual harassment is a form of GBV affecting women. GBV is rooted in men鈥檚 entitlement and privilege over women, social norms regarding the need to assert male control or power, enforce gender roles or prevent or punish what is considered to be unacceptable female behaviour. Those factors also contribute to the explicit or implicit social acceptance of GBV and the widespread impunity (General recommendation No. 35).
       
      The application of preconceived and stereotypical notions of what constitutes GBV, what women鈥檚 responses to such violence should be, and the standard of proof required to substantiate its occurrence affect women鈥檚 rights to equality before the law, a fair trial and effective remedy. 鈥極ften judges adopt rigid standards about what they consider to be appropriate behavior for women and penalize those who do not conform to these stereotypes.鈥 (CEDAW 2015)
       
      In E.A., the Court consistently relied on the IC and GREVIO materials, but failed to acknowledge the gendered nature of E.A.鈥檚 victimisation by her abuser and to scrutinise her judicial revictimisation for gender bias. Indeed, regarding victims鈥 rights in principle, the Court reaffirmed that 鈥榠t is essential for [judges] to avoid reproducing sexist stereotypes in decisions, to downplay [GBV], and to expose women to secondary victimisation by using guilt-inducing language鈥. (搂138) [emphasis added] At the same time, in its reasoning regarding E.A.鈥檚 specific case, it never once mentioned that she was victimised as a woman enduring GBV and then, revictimised as a woman by sexist stereotyping.
      E.A. is one of a total of four workplace sexual harassment cases decided by the Court: All茅e c. France (2024); Vu膷kovi膰 v. Croatia (2023); and C. v. Romania (2022) analysed here. In none of those cases did the Court engage with the underlying issue of gender discrimination. In this regard, E.A. is another missed opportunity for the Court to acknowledge that sexual harassment being inherently gendered and thus, discriminatory, , any failure to properly address it, especially at the level of legislation and judicial decisions denying victimhood/ blaming victims, should be scrutinised as likely being discriminatory too. However, in C. v. Romania (2022), the Court refused to apply Article 14, implying that the applicant in such a case has a burden of proof for sheer applicability. C. failed to meet that, not providing 鈥榓ny material to allow the Court to assess the existence of potential discrimination鈥 (搂90). Perhaps unsurprisingly, the applicants following her in Vu膷kovi膰, All茅e, and E.A. did not raise Article 14 allegations, although they all faced their abusers鈥 impunity, and one of the victims, All茅e, was in fact punished instead of him, for exposing him.
       
      The Court has often held it unnecessary to respond to discrimination claims (see critique). On the other hand, as master of the characterisation of the facts 鈥 a power it frequently relies on 鈥 it has never, not once, considered it necessary to engage with underlying (gender) (in)equality where the applicants silenced themselves on that issue. 
       
      I argue that the Court discourages discrimination claims, which may have contributed to E.A.'s not making such a claim. The Court routinely edits applicants' claims, applying articles it prefers, discarding some of the ones they raised, especially A14. It should be able and willing to do the reverse as well - apply an article the applicant omitted if the facts warrant it, especially Article 14 in a GBV case, in which the courts revictimised the woman. In E.A., at the very least, it could and should have integrated a discrimination analysis under Articles 8 and/or 3, as it has done in other cases. 
      Next, the Court did not qualify E.A.鈥檚 revictimisation as a breach of a negative State duty (to refrain from wrongdoing). It only found positive duties (to act protectively) were breached. (搂171) This omission typifies the Court鈥檚 approach to judicial stigmatisation of SV/ GBV victims (L. v. France, J.L. v. Italy, M.葮.D. v. RomaniaC v. Romania). The Court stops short of condemning the domestic judges for what they did, framing it instead as something they let happen: they 鈥榚xposed鈥 the victim to revictimisation rather than committed her revictimisation themselves (see critique).
      The Court has recognised domestic judicial leniency as barring access to justice in SV cases, dissuading victims from reporting pervasive abuse (Vu膷kovi膰 v. Croatia). However, it may not have examined its own arguable lack of strictness with judges blaming victims in such cases, shielding them from being named as gender-biased, active perpetrators of discriminatory harm. The consequences of its leniency in this regard may be seen as similar: in E.A, and other cases of impunity for SV, the revictimised women did not allege discrimination, their possible Article 14 claims possibly discouraged by ECHR case law.
      The Court should help women articulate their inequality, not silence them by creating expectations that they would be dismissed if they attempt to enforce their equality rights on a par with other Convention rights, that their voices would be mute if they named male privilege.      

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