In June 2002 the Legislative Council Standing Committee on Social Issues
released a report titled,
Safety net? Inquiry into the Classification
(Publications, Films and Computer Games) Enforcement Amendment Bill 2001
– Final Report: On-Line Matters . That report included the following
recommendation:
The Attorney-General consider either establishing a licensing scheme,
similar to that which operates in the ACT to allow controlled premises to sell
X-rated material in NSW or taking more enforcement action against breaches of
the legislation.
Further to this, on 30 April 2003 a notice of motion was moved in the
Legislative Council that leave be given for a Private Members’ Bill,
sponsored by the Hon Peter Breen MLC, ‘to amend the NSW Classification
(Publications, Films and Computer Games) Enforcement Act 1995 to remove the
prohibition on the sale of films classified “X”, and for other
purposes.
These developments serve as the basis for this paper on X rated films. Its
major findings are:
- X rated films are legally available for sale or hire from the
ACT or the Northern Territory (p 2).
- In the States, the law only permits X rated films to be
possessed for personal use. X rated films are not, and never have been, legally
available for sale or hire in NSW (p 3).
- Prior to the introduction of the X classification in 1984,
sexually explicit films were available for sale in NSW. They were unclassified
and subject to the State’s indecency laws (p 3).
- The X classification is a restrictive category of films that is
defined to be unsuitable for minors (p 3).
- The X classification is also defined under the National
Classification Code to exclude all violent content. Depictions involving
coercion and non-consent have been banned in X since 1984, with later
prohibitions being placed on sexually assaultive language, fetishes and
purposefully demeaning depictions (p 3).
- While all classification decisions for NSW are made under the
Commonwealth Classification Act – the Classification (Publications,
Films, Computer Games) Act 1995 , enforcement of the law is a matter for
the State, under the Classification (Publications, Films, Computer Games)
Enforcement Act (NSW) (p 3 and p 19).
- Specific offences relating to the sale, production and
distribution (but not possession by adults) of X rated films are found under
Part 2 of the NSW Classification Enforcement Act 1995. The private exhibition
of an X film in the presence of minors is an offence under this legislation (s.
14) (p 22).
- An offence of publishing indecent articles (other than child
pornography) is specifically created under section 578C (2) of the Crimes
Act 1900 (NSW). Whether an X film constitutes an ‘indecent
article’ would be for the courts to decide. The proposed Draft
Classification Enforcement Amendment Bill 2003 would amend the Crimes Act by
omitting ‘or X’ from paragraph (e) of the definition of article in
section 578C (1) (pp 24- 25).
- Two conclusions can be drawn from the enforcement statistics.
One is that relatively few cases are brought under the relevant provisions of
the Classification Enforcement Act 1995. The second is that, for those cases
where a finding of guilty is recorded for a principal offence, most occur under
section 6 (a), where a fine is the most common outcome. Section 6(a) provides
for the offence of selling or exhibiting a film classified RC or X (p 30).
- The current ACT X film licencing scheme has been in place since
1996. According to the Registrar for this scheme, Tony Brown, there is a high
level of compliance with the relevant licensing conditions, something that is
helped ‘by the fact that the industry is now controlled by a smaller
number of players and in the main these are publicly listed companies’ (p
31).
- Every aspect of the debate about X rated films is contested,
none more so than research findings on the effects, or lack of effects, of
viewing sexually explicit material. The recent research of Flood and Hamilton
on youth and pornography in Australia has proved controversial (pp 32-41).
- At this stage, social science research is unlikely to answer
the legal and policy questions at issue in the X rated debate in any definitive
way. However, certain benchmarks are established in Australian law and policy.
For example, it recognises the potential harmful effects that may be caused by
sexually violent pornography. For this reason, such material is banned (p 41).
- From one standpoint, over recent years the base line of
Australian law and policy has moved beyond a primary concern with
‘harm’ towards a greater emphasis on ‘offensiveness’,
as seen in the banning of all fetishes from the X classification. From another
standpoint, recent policy has reflected a different and broader conception of
‘harm’, one that encompasses a concern for the physical (and
psychic) well-being of participants in sexually explicit material, as well as a
concern for the ‘social harm’ that may be caused by such material.
This reminds us that very different results on the harmful effects (or lack
thereof) of pornography can be reached depending on how ‘harm’ is
defined (p 42).
- Various surveys and opinion polls have been conducted over the
past decade or so (pp 42-46). The available results are set out in Appendix D.
- The largely ACT based legitimate X film industry has around
430,000 persons on its mail order list (p 47). Various claims are made about
the size of the black market in NSW, which is estimated to have a turnover of
$45 million in video sales alone (p 50).
- In recent years some art-house films, depicting sexually
explicit material, have been classified R. Explicit sex education films have
been permitted in R since the early 1990s (p 53).
- Whatever the merits or demerits of an X film licencing scheme,
ultimately the debate will revolve around competing and conflicting perceptions
of the content of X rated films (p 58).