Quantcast The Strand

"Sex work can be safe work"

Sex professionals challenge Canada's anti-prostitution laws, demanding respect for their Charter rights

By Betina Alonso, News Editor

Issue date: 11/10/09 Section: News
  • Print
  • Email
<b>Sex workers claim endangerment from current legislation</b> Art: Corrie Jackson
Sex workers claim endangerment from current legislation Art: Corrie Jackson

Canada's anti-prostitution laws are under fire, as two sex workers and a dominatrix claim that the current laws deny sex professionals their Charter rights under the Canadian Constitution.

The applicants are Toronto-based workers Terri-Jean Bedford, a dominatrix, Valerie Scott, a former sex trade professional who now advocates for sex workers' rights, and Amy Lebovitch, who has been a prostitute for the last twelve years.

Essentially, current laws do not criminalize prostitution, but everything related to it: sex workers are not allowed to run brothels, communicate for sex trade or live off the avails of prostitution.

The main issue with these laws, the applicants claim, is that they expose sex professionals to greater risk than necessary, as they have to resort to finding customers on the streets or the internet, without any ability to screen them.

Valerie Scott, one of the applicants and the executive director of Sex Professionals of Canada, claims that these laws have been upheld for so long because "Parliament does not have the backbone to bring the death penalty upon [sex workers] or decriminalize prostitution entirely", and maintains that when it comes to the sex trade, the unofficial policy is for the police to look the other way.

She argues that the criminalization of sex work also places significant burdens on tax-payers, who bear the costs for "imprisonment of sex professionals, the one court-room that stays open every day for prostitutes, the health care money that goes into hospitals when we're beaten up".

Professor Mariana Valverde, director of the Centre of Criminology at UofT, asserts that these laws result from "no intention, no general plan," and adds that "the vast majority of the laws [on sex work] are Victorian, literally, and they were put in individually at different times, without a plan."

When it comes to charter rights, she adds that "of course all forms of business regulation will interfere with freedom of speech and other charter rights, but the crucial question is whether the current [prostitution] laws curtail rights more than it is necessary and rational. And the answer is 'yes'."

Mr. Michael Morris, counsel for the attorney general of Canada, says that the government "believes prostitution carries dangers and harms to the community at large", and the laws now in place intend to protect society.
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

Viewing Comments 1 - 1 of 1

cheap custom essays

posted 11/24/09 @ 11:58 PM EST

I completely agree with author`s point of view.

Post a Comment

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Latest Flickr Photo
Join The Strand's pool to contribute!

Advertisement