Viele Deutsche wandern jährlich nach Kanada aus. Ist Sexwork da auch eine Triebkraft?
John Lowman's Prostitution Research Page
Mehr zur Lage in Kanada für Sexarbeiter...
Trade Secrets Guide

Sexwork Organisationen
Ottawa (Ontario)
POWER
Prostitutes of Ottawa/Gatineau Work Educate & Resist
www.powerOttawa.ca
Montréal (Québec)
Stella
www.chezStella.org
Stepping Stone
www.steppingStoneNS.ca
Toronto (Ontario)
Sex Professionals of Canada
www.spoc.ca
Maggie’s
www.maggiesToronto.ca
Vancouver (British Columbia)
FIRST
Feminists advocating for rights and equality for sex industry workers
www.firstadvocates.org
CUP
Committee to Unite Prostitutes!
www.walnet.org/cup/
Triple-X
Worker' Soliarity Association of B.C.
www.triple-x.org/
Sex Worker Toolkit
www.livinginCommunity.ca/toolkit/
Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network
www.aidsLaw.ca
2 Rechtsbroschüren von Maggies
Trick or Trap? Dick'ering in public is against the law:
www.walnet.org/csis/legal_tips/trials/trickortrap.pdf
(16 pages)
Bawdy House Business:
www.walnet.org/csis/legal_tips/trials/bawdybiz.pdf
(20 pages)
Zeittafel Prostitutions-Recht
2013: The Supreme Court throws out all three provisions as violating constitutional guarantees to life, liberty and security of the person. The justices give Parliament a year to craft a replacement law.
www.sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=137893#137893
2012: The Appeal Court upholds Himel on the bawdy house law, modified the living on the avails law to specifically preclude exploitation and reversed her on soliciting.
2011: Ontario Court of Appeal holds three-day hearing on government appeal of Himel decision.
2010: Judge Susan Himel strikes down the three key provisions of the laws, saying they were unconstitutional.
www.sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=88139#88139
2010: Polizeibericht zu den Pickton Serienmorden
www.sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=86237#86237
2009: An Ontario Superior Court hearing opens in a suit brought by 3 former and active sex-trade workers seeking to overturn the prostitution laws.
2007: Pickton convicted of six murders and sentenced to life. The trial focuses attention on the plight of street prostitutes.
www.sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=28739#28739
2002: Police arrest Robert Pickton in a case which would eventually involve the murders of 26 women, most of them prostitutes from Vancouver’s gritty downtown east side.
1990: The Supreme Court hands down a reference upholding the street soliciting law, saying eliminating prostitution is a valid social goal.
1985: Parliament passes a law barring communicating in public for the purposes of prostitution in an effort to combat streetwalking.
1982: Charter of Rights and Freedoms signed into law.
1867: Canada essentially inherits anti-prostitution laws from Britain at Confederation.

Studie über Sexarbeit in Vancouver: Gewalt und Sexarbeit bedingen sich nicht.
Most prostitutes don't work streets, says study
Linda Nguyen, Vancouver Sun
Published: Monday, June 18, 2007
Prostitution and violence do not always go hand in hand, according to a three-year academic study by Simon Fraser University.
In the first study of its kind in the country, criminology graduate student Tamara O'Doherty found that two-thirds of off-street prostitutes -- specifically high-end escorts -- have never experienced violence on the job.
The number of prostitutes in Vancouver is estimated to be in the thousands, but only 10 to 20 per cent are actually working on the street, O'Doherty said.
The study shows that 80 to 90 per cent work as off-street prostitutes running their own businesses through newspaper and online advertisements, bawdy houses and massage parlours.
She said her research shows people who support criminalizing prostitution because it's violent or not a choice are basing their opinions on the experiences of street prostitutes who "are pushed into isolated areas of the city" and work in fear of the police.
O'Doherty contacted Vancouver prostitutes by sending out mass e-mails to several escort services. The 49 women who responded were not what most people would stereotype as prostitutes.
"These women weren't blonde bombshells who were there for the 'porn star experience.' My biggest surprise in doing this research was how incredibly articulate these women in the industry were," O'Doherty said.
"People obviously assume women wouldn't make the choice to go into prostitution but I found these women are from every walk of life," she said.
Some women were sex workers only on weekends with regular out-of-town clients.
"They're moms, artists, lawyers, nurses, police officers and teachers. You would have no idea if you had one of them living next door to you," she said.
More than 90 per cent of the study participants were university-educated.
O'Doherty argues these women rarely or never experienced violence -- physical or sexual assault, threats, clients unwilling to pay or use a condom -- because they're allowed to negotiate terms of their transactions, unlike street sex workers.
Aurea Flynn of Vancouver Rape Relief and Women's Shelter said the study goes too far pushing for the legitimization of prostitution.
"What we know is that the average age of prostitutes when they begin the trade is 14 years old and that most women were molested or raped before they even begin," she said. "The fact that they're not reporting it in their current work situation doesn't exclude that they didn't experience violence from males in the past."
SFU professor John Lowman has been researching violence in prostitution since the '70s and said these results confirmed what he's suspected all along.
"The importance of this research is that it shows that the prohibitionist argument is ideological and political.
"It provides a huge stumbling block and strongly favours decriminalization," he said.
lnguyen (at) png.canwest.com
© The Vancouver Sun 2007
Quelle
.