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Abstract

On October 5th, 2017, the New York Times published an article that would establish the #MeToo movement and help millions of women across the globe to raise their voice and share their stories of sexual harassment, aggression and/or violence. If Harvey Weinstein was the main accused, he was, actually, the epitome of a systemic, as well as an endemic, issue that didn’t stop at the studios’ doors and was made possible thanks to a rather surprising and quite unexpected accomplice. In fact, “Hollywood’s open secret” has been well-guarded by, among other things, the contract and its law. In the eyes of a contract law specialist, whether it be a man or a woman, the major highlight of Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey’s article rests in their ability to have brought to light contracts—the, now, infamous and highly criticised “NDAs” (non-disclosure agreements)—that ensured Weinstein the freedom to buy his victims’ silence. The first goal of this essay is trying to understand, on the one hand, how could that be possible and, on the other hand, explain to a larger audience how a tool usually used for economic and commercial purposes could have been diverted from its traditional use. It also aims to present measures that have been adopted in the United States to fight these agreements, and imagine what could they be in a country such as France. Although these types of “NDAs” don’t seem to find their equivalent in the French public sphere, it is still helpful to ponder over remedies offered by the new French law of contract shall these contracts ever come to exist… or arise.

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Notes

  1. “Harvey Weinstein paid off sexual harassment accusers for decades”.

  2. Eg. The campaign conducted by the United Nations, «He for She»: <https://www.heforshe.org/en> (Consulted June 4th, 2023).

  3. Although men are not immune from sexual assault and/or violence, women (particularly young women, migrant women and women in wage and salaried work) are still more affected by sexual violence and harassment, especially in the workplace: <https://www.unwomen.org/en/news-stories/explainer/2023/10/four-actions-to-forge-workplaces-free-from-sexual-harassment-and-violence>; <https://www.ilo.org/global/publications/WCMS_863095/lang--en/index.htm> (Both consulted November 18th, 2023).

  4. The case of Bill O’Reilly and Fox News: <https://www.theguardian.com/media/2017/oct/21/bill-oreilly-32m-harassment-claim-fox-news-deal> (Consulted June 4th, 2023).

  5. The case of Larry Nassar: <https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2018/jan/26/larry-nassar-abuse-gymnasts-scandal-culture> (Consulted June 4th, 2023).

  6. The case of Andy Rubin: <https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2018/oct/25/google-andy-rubin-android-creator-payoff-sexual-misconduct-report> (Consulted June 4th, 2023).

  7. <https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/bills/2021/S738> (Consulted June 4th, 2023).

  8. <https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billNavClient.xhtml?bill_id=202120220SB331> (Consulted June, 4th, 2023).

  9. Cass. civ. 1ère, 11 mai 2022, n°s 21-16.156 and 21-16.497.

  10. The other four are: “ordre public d’Etat”, which refers to affairs of the State, public and social peace; “ordre public économique”, which deals with exchange of goods. We sometimes refer to it as “ordre public social et économique” and its best illustration is Consumer Law; “ordre public social”, which primarily refers to social rights whether it is Labor Law, social security Law, rights to have access to a decent home; “ordre public des biens” which deals with the French distinction between “bien meuble” and “bien immeuble”, in other words, “movables” and “immovables”.

  11. Art. 222-22 of the French Criminal Code: “Is considered to be a sexual assault any sexual harm committed through violence, duress, threats or surprise, or, in cases defined by the law, when committed on a minor by a person of age”.

  12. “A contract of adhesion is a contract in which the majority of stipulations are non-negotiable, having been written beforehand by one of the parties only”.

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Acknowledgements

I would like to thank Mrs Céline Miller, Judge at the Court of Appeal of Douai, for her enlightenments on the articulation between French civil and criminal procedures. I would like to point out that, following the footsteps of Me Marc-Antoine Picotte, PhD candidate and part-time lecturer at Ottawa University, who wrote his essay (Adhérer ou adhérer : essai sur la notion de contrat (par adhésion), Université de Montréal, 2019) using the pronouns « she/her » as a way to emphasise a more inclusive way to think about women in the discourse of law, I decided to use the same pronouns instead of « he/his » whenever that was possible. All dispositions taken from the French Civil Code have been freely translated by myself.

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Villain, H. Non-disclosure Agreements: When Contracts Serve Sexual Violence and How to Deal with Them. Int J Semiot Law (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11196-023-10082-3

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