As 16 Days of Activism begins, we’re spotlighting the growing threat of sexual violence in digital spaces, a form of abuse that not only mirrors and amplifies the harm women and girls already face offline, but is also giving rise to new and evolving forms of harm.
The harms are real: image-based sexual abuse, AI-generated deepfakes, online grooming, and sexual extortion are becoming more widespread. These acts violate bodily autonomy, cause lasting trauma, and disproportionately target women, girls, LGBTQ+ individuals, and marginalised communities.
The response is lagging behind. Many justice systems still treat sexual violence as a physical act, ignoring how power and control are weaponised through technology. Legal definitions based on force, rather than consent, fail to reflect how abuse actually happens in both digital and physical spaces.
We’re advocating for legal frameworks that:
Centre consent as the basis for all sexual violence laws
Address online harms explicitly, including non-consensual deepfakes and digitally facilitated exploitation
Prioritise survivor protection across all justice systems, regardless of where the violence takes place
Through our global legal advocacy and as co-founders of the Alliance for Universal Digital Rights (AUDRi), we are pushing governments and international bodies to act, because justice must evolve with the ways violence is being committed.