Power, Control & Consent
This module explains the **common thread** linking sexual harassment,
grooming, exploitation, assault, and serious sexual harm.
The defining factor is not violence alone —
it is the removal of free, safe choice through power,
pressure, fear, or dependency.
The unifying lens
Sexual harm takes many forms, but its structure is consistent. When one person holds power and another feels unable to refuse, consent cannot exist — even if the situation appears calm or cooperative.
The four elements present in all sexual harm
1️⃣ Power imbalance
Authority, age, status, access, resources, opportunity, or physical advantage place one person above another.
2️⃣ Coercion (overt or subtle)
Pressure may involve threats — or quiet tactics such as guilt, obligation, emotional leverage, or fear of loss.
3️⃣ Fear, pressure, or dependency
Fear of consequences, emotional reliance, isolation, or real-world harm limits the ability to choose freely.
4️⃣ Removal of free choice
When saying “no” feels unsafe, impossible, or costly, consent is no longer genuine.
Consent under pressure and stress
Under fear or authority, the nervous system may default to freeze, appease, comply, or submit. These are survival responses — not agreement.
Power in institutions and systems
Power imbalance is amplified in environments such as sport, workplaces, education, care, religion, medicine, and online platforms. Authority often silences challenge and protects misconduct.
Consent: what it is and what it is not
- Could this person say no safely?
- Would there be consequences for refusal?
- Was power involved?
- Was choice truly free?
- Consent requires freedom, not pressure
- Power imbalance changes everything
- Compliance is not agreement
- This lens applies to every form of sexual harm

