14th avril 2026

Sonora, Mexico: Recommendations to reform the Penal Code on consent

This legal brief by Equality Now and EnIgualdad analyses a proposed reform to the Penal Code in the state of Sonora, Mexico, and offers recommendations to better align state law with international human rights standards on consent. It examines gaps in the current legal framework, including the continued use of force-based definitions of rape and the discriminatory offence of estupro, and proposes changes to strengthen legal protection for girls and adolescents. It builds on Equality Now’s earlier research, including our report, Failure to protect: How discriminatory sexual violence laws and practices are hurting women, girls and adolescents in the Americas, and complements resources such as our Guide for legislating on sexual violence with a consent-based approach.

What’s inside the report?

  • An overview of sexual violence against girls and adolescents in Sonora, including state-level data that shows the scale and urgency of the problem.
  • A legal analysis of proposed reforms to Sonora’s Penal Code, with article-by-article recommendations grounded in international human rights law.
  • Recommendations to move from force-based approaches to a consent-based legal standard, and to eliminate discriminatory provisions such as estupro.

Who’s it for?

  • State legislators and legislative advisers in Sonora and across Mexico
  • Justice sector professionals
  • Civil society organisations and advocates in Sonora

Key takeaways and recommendations

Sexual violence laws in Sonora still contain gaps that undermine access to justice for girls and adolescents. This brief analyses a proposed reform to the state Penal Code and offers recommendations to align it with international human rights standards on consent. It shows that force-based definitions of sexual violence, as well as discriminatory offences such as estupro, continue to limit effective protection and accountability. It also highlights the need for legal reforms that reflect the realities of coercion, unequal power, and the particular risks faced by girls and adolescents.

This brief calls for a stronger, consent-based legal framework that protects girls and adolescents and improves access to justice.

Recommendations

  • Centre sexual violence offences on the absence of consent: Ensure the law does not rely on proof of force, resistance, or intimidation to establish sexual violence.
  • Eliminate discriminatory legal provisions such as estupro: Remove offences that minimise sexual violence against adolescents.
  • Strengthen protection for girls and adolescents: Expand legal safeguards in ways that reflect their heightened vulnerability to coercion and abuse.
  • Avoid criminalising consensual peer relationships: Include close-in-age exceptions so that protections for minors do not penalise consensual relationships between adolescents.
  • Adopt a victim-centred approach: Ensure legal reform supports protection, dignity, and access to justice without revictimisation.

Explore more resources

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Legislating on sexual violence with a consent-based approach in Latin America and the Caribbean

This guide highlights the need to align legal definitions of sexual violence with international standards by centering on the lack of voluntary and free consent.

Mexico: Protection gaps in sexual violence laws and practices

In Mexico, more than 41% of women over age 15 have experienced sexual violence. Yet, gaps in existing laws continue to deny survivors justice, allowing perpetrators to evade accountability. This factsheet draws from Equality Now’s 2021 report Failure to Protect.

Failure to protect: How discriminatory sexual violence laws and practices are hurting women, girls and adolescents in the Americas

Equality Now’s analysis reveals that loopholes, protection gaps, and systemic barriers in sexual violence laws and justice systems across multiple jurisdictions effectively deny survivors access to justice.

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