Länderberichte KANADA:

Hier findet Ihr "europaweite" Links, Beiträge und Infos - Sexarbeit betreffend. Die Themen sind weitgehend nach Ländern aufgeteilt.
Benutzeravatar
Marc of Frankfurt
SW Analyst
SW Analyst
Beiträge: 14095
Registriert: 01.08.2006, 14:30
Ich bin: Keine Angabe

Sieg für Sexworker Interessenvertretung

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Bild
Oberster Gerichtshof SCC



Sexworker Interessenvertreter haben einen grundsätzlichen Rechtsstreit vor dem obersten Gericht von Kanada gewonnen:

In dem seit 2007 laufenden Prozessen wurde darüber entschieden, dass Sexworker und ihre Vereinigung überhaupt ein Recht haben die Verfassungsmäßigkeit von Strafgesetzen gegen Straßenprostitution überprüfen zu lassen.



Bisher hatte die Gerichtsbarkeit nur erlaubt dass einzelne Klagen von direkt Betroffenen, Sexworkern oder Opfern zugelassen werden, die aber aufgrund der prekären Lebensumstände nie eingereicht wurden.

Die Verfassungsbeschwerde der Sexworker als öffentlich berechtigte Interessen-Selbstvertretung war erfolgreich.

Canada’s highest court has unanimously ruled that a former sex worker and an organization run by and for street-based sex workers should be granted public interest standing to challenge the laws related to adult prostitution.

A victory along the way in British Columbia (BC)!!! The Case in summary:

In making its ruling, the court looked at the three considerations for granting legal standing:
- Whether the matter is a serious legal issue.
- Whether the party bringing the case has a stake in the outcome.
- Whether the proposed suit is a reasonable and effective means of bringing the matter before the court.

In this case, all three factors, applied purposively and flexibly, favour granting public interest standing to the respondents. In fact, there is no dispute that the first and second factors are met: the respondents’ action raises serious justiciable issues and the respondents have an interest in the outcome of the action and are fully engaged with the issues that they seek to raise. Indeed, the constitutionality of the prostitution provisions of the Criminal Code constitutes a serious justiciable issue and the respondents, given their work, have a strong engagement with the issue.

This case constitutes public interest litigation: the respondents have raised issues of public importance that transcend their immediate interests. Their challenge is comprehensive, relating as it does to nearly the entire legislative scheme. It provides an opportunity to assess through the constitutional lens the overall effect of this scheme on those most directly affected by it.

It is obvious that the claim is being pursued with thoroughness and skill.

The impugned Criminal Code provisions, by criminalizing many of the activities surrounding prostitution, adversely affect a great number of women. These issues are also clearly justiciable ones, as they concern the constitutionality of the challenged provisions.

Some aspects of the statement of claim raise serious issues as to the invalidity of the legislation.

"Granting standing will not only serve to enhance the principle of legality with respect to serious issues of direct concern to some of the most marginalized members of society, but it will also promote the economical use of scarce judicial resources"


Supreme Court decision in SWUAV - the short version
www.pivotLegal.org/scc_decision_in_swua ... to_justice

Supreme Court to decide if Vancouver Sex Workers can challenge prostitution laws
www.pivotLegal.org/_supreme_court_to_de ... ution_laws

Sex-trade workers group wins bid for court challenge
Video
www.cbc.ca/news/politics/story/2012/09/ ... ml?cmp=rss


Jetzt bereiten sich die Sexworker Advokaten auf die kommenden eigentlichen Prozesse vor, um die kriminalisierenden Prostitutionsgesetze zu Fall zu bringen...
www.spoc.ca
www.facebook.com/groups/2422902273/10151047034737274/

Benutzeravatar
Marc of Frankfurt
SW Analyst
SW Analyst
Beiträge: 14095
Registriert: 01.08.2006, 14:30
Ich bin: Keine Angabe

Fachbuch

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Selling Sex:
Experience, Advocacy, and Research on Sex Work in Canada


Emily van der Meulen, Elya M. Durisin, Victoria Love

http://books.google.ca/books?id=jnGRWArYI1sC

Doris67
PlatinStern
PlatinStern
Beiträge: 1127
Registriert: 20.06.2012, 10:16
Wohnort: Strasbourg
Ich bin: SexarbeiterIn

Beitrag von Doris67 »

Zwei neue kanadische Untersuchungen, die helfen, für die Dekriminalisierung von Sexarbeit zu argumentieren: http://www.socialsciences.uottawa.ca/gi ... search.pdf , http://www.socialsciences.uottawa.ca/gi ... exeWeb.pdf
Mitglied der Confédération Nationale du Travail

Benutzeravatar
Tilopa
Silberstern
Silberstern
Beiträge: 444
Registriert: 17.02.2013, 12:50
Ich bin: SexarbeiterIn

RE: Länderberichte KANADA:

Beitrag von Tilopa »

Natasha Segal von der University of Toronto bezieht in einem Whitepaper Stellung für die Entkriminalisierung der Sexarbeit und stellt einige ökonomische Überlegungen über die diesbezüglichen Vorteile an.

Buy Me Love: Realizing the Economic Potential of Sex Work Decriminalization

"Not long ago, same sex marriage in Canada was illegal. Same sex couples experienced discrimination, were labeled as inferior, suffered from harm and violence and were prohibited from marriage and family creation with the consenting adult of their choice. However, in 2005, same sex marriage was legalized ('Bill C-38: The Civil Marriage Act (LS-502E),' n.d.). This spawned an array of changing attitudes around LGTBQI rights that transformed same sex couple status in our society and created a more tolerant, respectful and prosperous Country as a result. So much so that World Pride 2014 will be held in Toronto, Canada ('Tourism Toronto | World Pride 2014,' n.d.).

Changed attitudes and perceptions toward LGTBQI rights created a more inclusive Canada for more people who live here. This inclusivity also generated vast economic gains; Gay Pride grew into a multi-million dollar source of revenue, with unofficial estimated revenues for Toronto’s Pride Week 2010 alone estimated in excess of $136 million.

Like same sex couples prior to 2005, sex workers today face regular stigmatization, experience discrimination, are labeled as inferior, and suffer from harm and violence. Sex workers are perceived as criminals whose basic human rights are not observed or respected: 'For some, being 'marked' or labeled as a 'prostitute' is experienced as a mark for life -- a label that cannot be shed, and one that is a constant reminder of one's inferior status in the world'. Due to this lack of acceptance or, at very least, tolerance, for professions some may find personally immoral, many sex workers (female, male and transgender) suffer maltreatment and abuse, feel unsafe requesting police protection and are precluded from practicing their personal freedoms such as the right to practice the profession of their choice, the right to freely negotiate services and the right to personal security. Such conditions are neither innate nor exclusive to sex work; they are rather the outcome of the stigmatization of sex workers ('Redefining Prostitution as Sex Work on the International Agenda,' n.d.). This lack of acceptance and equal respect for all citizens’ rights regardless of their personal choice of profession increases sex worker vulnerability to harassment, violence and other forms of ill treatment (Monto, 2004).

Improved attitudes and perceptions toward sex workers and sex worker rights will create a more inclusive, more open and accepting Canada. This inclusivity will generate economic gains. To this end, the outcome of the Bedford v. Canada case, which will appear before the Supreme Court in June of 2013, although a civil rights issue, may also affect Canada’s economy."

http://martinprosperity.org/2013/06/11/ ... alization/
Dateianhänge
Buy-me-love-Whitepaper_v04.pdf
(943.68 KiB) 1409-mal heruntergeladen

Benutzeravatar
Marc of Frankfurt
SW Analyst
SW Analyst
Beiträge: 14095
Registriert: 01.08.2006, 14:30
Ich bin: Keine Angabe

Forts. Bedford v. Canada

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

[youtube][/youtube]



Supreme Court Case
Attorney General of Canada, et al. v. Terri Jean Bedford, et al.


Sammlung der Schriftsätze
http://www.scc-csc.gc.ca/case-dossier/c ... ?cas=34788

Hearing
2013-06-13

und im linken Rand weitere Unter-Seiten:
Summary
Counsel
Parties
Docket




Zusammenfassung von Dr. Laura Agustin zum vorangegangenen Urteil "Dominatrix Bedford v. Canada" von Richterin Susan Himel am Ontario Superior Court of Justice’s 2010.
http://www.lauraagustin.com/remembering ... -the-court

Das Urteil "Dominatrix Bedford v. Canada" von Richterin Susan Himel am Ontario Superior Court of Justice’s 2010
http://www.canlii.org/en/on/onsc/doc/20 ... c4264.html

Benutzeravatar
Marc of Frankfurt
SW Analyst
SW Analyst
Beiträge: 14095
Registriert: 01.08.2006, 14:30
Ich bin: Keine Angabe

Zusammenfassung

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Dominatrix Bedford vs. Canada
Supreme Court of Canada Hearing 2013



Zusammenfassung der Argumente der Anhörung vom Welt-Sexworker-Dachverband NSWP.org:

- Argument der Abschreckung und Prostitutionseindämmung von Seiten des Staates:
The Crown argued that criminalising some aspects of sex work is justified, since it dissuades people from entering the sex trade, which they believe to be inherently harmful to sex workers and society.
- Gegenargument basierend auf humaner Ethik und universellen Sexworker-Menschenrechten:
Bedford's attorney, Alan Young, responded that it is "ethically unsound" to use laws that harm street workers to "send a message." ... a law with the purpose of preventing public nuisance can not be justified when it increases risk of harm for sex workers.

- Argumente der Prostitutionsgegner:
Myth-making, fear-mongering, and storytelling. Moralistic arguments. Sensationalised narratives about human trafficking and addiction. Citing problematic research.
- Gegenargumente für Sexworker Berufswahlfreiheit:
People have the liberty to choose dangerous activities, and Parliament should not further endanger them while claiming to be concerned for their safety. (Doppelmoral)

- Argumente der law and order Vertreter:
Betreff Handlungsmöglichkeiten / Agency: If someone decides consciously to engage in street work, in spite of criminal laws against it, the government is not responsible for the risk of harm that this person knowingly has chosen.
- Argumente pro Prostitution:
Genauere Fallunterscheidung: "The limits on gambling and alcohol aren't injurious [nicht gesundheitsgefährdend]," Justice McLachlin said, whereas the Communication and Bawdy-House laws put sex workers in very real physical danger.

- Wenn die Prostitutionsgegner Ex-Sexworker/Opfer als Argumente benutzen:
The Women's Coalition for the Abolition of Prostitution featured Bridget Perrier, a former sex worker who is now a staunch abolitionist, brandishing a bent wire hanger to demonstrate the post-traumatic stress she suffers from her time in sex work.

Den Sexworker-Gruppen Maggies aus Toronto www.maggiesToronto.ca und Stella aus Montreal www.chezStella.org war es verwehrt worden vor Gericht zu sprechen, während zahlreiche Christliche Gruppen eingeladen waren.

Canadians Await Decision by Supreme Court on Decriminalisation
http://www.nswp.org/news-story/canadian ... nalisation



Presse Spiegel
http://walnet.org/csis/news/bedford.html


Info-Sheet
http://www.chezstella.org/docs/StellaIn ... edford.pdf


Das Urteil wird erst in einigen Monaten erwartet.
Es kann die Entkriminalisierung bringen, aber auch einen Rückschritt zur Kriminalisierung.

Sexworker lernen währenddessen sich immer besser öffentlich zu organisieren.

Bild

Benutzeravatar
Marc of Frankfurt
SW Analyst
SW Analyst
Beiträge: 14095
Registriert: 01.08.2006, 14:30
Ich bin: Keine Angabe

Methoden der Abolitionisten

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Einseitiger Film über Prostitution in Kanada, die dort laufenden Prozesse der Sexworker, der den Neo-Abolitionismus des Schwedischen "Modells" verherrlicht



Protest-Brief von Rechtsanwalt der Kanadischen Sexworker, Prof. Alan Young

gegen den verfälschenden NFB Dokumentarfilm "Buying Sex"
(öffentlich gefördert mit $1 Million)



an
- National Film Board (Assistant Commissioner Mr. Claude Joili Coeur) und
- die Produktionsfirma



29 Seiten - liest sich wie ein Krimi
http://bedfordsafehaveninitiative.files ... he-nfb.pdf


Bild


Interview with film makers Teresa MacInnes and Kent Nason about Prof. Alan Young at min 3:00
www.youtube.com/watch?v=l-Y-zj-oblc
Film homepage www.nfb.ca/film/buying_sex/
Trailer 2min www.vimeo.com/69890441
Trisha Baptie (trigger warning) www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZPb_daDDAJM

Benutzeravatar
fraences
Admina
Admina
Beiträge: 7426
Registriert: 07.09.2009, 04:52
Wohnort: Frankfurt a. Main Hessen
Ich bin: Keine Angabe

RE: Länderberichte KANADA:

Beitrag von fraences »

Supreme Court strikes down Canada's prostitution laws

Head of Canadian Association of Elizabeth Fry Societies calls decision 'a sad day'


The Supreme Court of Canada has struck down the country's anti-prostitution laws in a unanimous decision, and given Parliament one year to come up with new legislation — should it choose to do so.

In striking down laws prohibiting brothels, living on the avails of prostitution and communicating in public with clients, the top court ruled Friday that the laws were over-broad and grossly disproportionate.

The ruling was in response to a court challenge by women with experience in the sex trade, Terri Jean Bedford, Amy Lebovitch and Valerie Scott.

The top court agreed with an Ontario court ruling that overturned the laws.

The Ontario Court of Appeal had upheld the law against communicating in public, but sided with the lower court in overturning the provisions against living off the avails and keeping a common bawdy house or brothel.
SCOC Bawdy House Challenge

Dominatrix Terri-Jean Bedford, right, and sex workers advocate Valerie Scott brought the case against Canada's prostitution laws. (Darren Calabrese/Canadian Press)

The women in the case had argued that the laws prevented them from safely conducting their business as sex-trade workers, arguing that hiring bodyguards and drivers, and being able to work in private homes or talk with potential clients in public were important to their safety.

Reaction was swift.

"It's a sad day that we've now had confirmed that it's OK to buy and sell women and girls in this country. I think generations to come — our daughters, their granddaughters and on — will look back and say, 'What were they thinking?,'" said Kim Pate, executive director of the Canadian Association of Elizabeth Fry Societies.

"To say that [prostitution] is a choice when you're talking about the women we work with is to say that in fact it's OK to just exploit them," Pate said.

"We've never seen men criminalized for buying and selling women and girls. We've always seen women criminalized for selling themselves. We absolutely object to the criminalization of women. Our position would not interfere with those women who truly have made their choices."

Lebovitch said she was "shocked" and happy at the ruling, that women who work in the sex trade won't have to risk their lives any longer

www.cbc.ca/news/politics/supreme-court- ... -1.2471572
Wer glaubt ein Christ zu sein, weil er die Kirche besucht, irrt sich.Man wird ja auch kein Auto, wenn man in eine Garage geht. (Albert Schweitzer)

*****
Fakten und Infos über Prostitution

Benutzeravatar
Tilopa
Silberstern
Silberstern
Beiträge: 444
Registriert: 17.02.2013, 12:50
Ich bin: SexarbeiterIn

RE: Länderberichte KANADA:

Beitrag von Tilopa »

Ein echter Lichtblick :001

Fefe hat auch noch einen ganz guten Artikel zu diesem Thema verlinkt: http://blog.fefe.de/?ts=ac4a4172 (en)

Benutzeravatar
Marc of Frankfurt
SW Analyst
SW Analyst
Beiträge: 14095
Registriert: 01.08.2006, 14:30
Ich bin: Keine Angabe

Urteilsspruch als Weihnachtsgeschenk

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Der Oberste Gerichthof in Kanada hat die Prostitutionsgesetze, die die Sicherheit der Sexworker gefährden, wegen Verfassungswidrigkeit aufgehoben - 20. Januar 2013


Jetzt hat die Politik, das Kanadische Parlament unter konservativer Regierung nur 1 Jahr Zeit bis Dezember 2014, um evt. neue Prostitutions-Prohibitions-Gesetze zu erlassen, bevor das Urteil endgültig in Kraft tritt, d.h. die 3 Strafgesetze ungültig werden, womit dann Sexwork entkriminalisiert ist wie jedes andere Gewerbe.

Dekriminalisierung der Prostitution gibt es sonst nur in NSW-Australien seit 1995 und in Neuseeland seit 2003.
www.sexworker.at/international


Bild




:welle Sexwork now Decriminalized in Canada by the SCC ruling !!! :welle


Canada v. Bedford



Today the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) delivered a landmark unanimous decision 9-0 (6 men, 3 women) in the

case of
Attorney General of Canada v. Terri Jean Bedford, Amy Lebovitch and Valerie Scott.

Canada’s highest court has ruled that 3 provisions of Canada’s Criminal Code,
- s. 210 (keeping or being found in a bawdy house),
- s. 212(1)(j) (living on the avails of prostitution), and
- s. 213(1)(c) (communicating in public for the purpose of prostitution)

violate the s. 7 right to security of the person protected by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms (1982 www.charterofrights.ca/en/16_00_01 ).

All 3 laws have been struck down.

This case was initiated in 2007 by three Ontario sex workers: Terri Jean Bedford, Amy Lebovitch and Valerie Scott.

The applicants asked the court to strike down the 3 provisions of the Criminal Code because they violate sex workers’ constitutional right to security of the person.

In a decision written by the Chief Justice, the court said:
  • “The prohibitions at issue do not merely impose conditions on how prostitutes operate. They go a critical step further, by imposing dangerous conditions on prostitution; they prevent people engaged in a risky – but legal – activity from taking steps to protect themselves from the risk.” (para 60)
Pivot, Downtown Eastside Sex Workers United Against Violence and PACE Society intervened in this case and took the position that all 3 provisions should be struck down. Given the limited time given to interveners for legal argument, we focused our submissions on the communication law, which creates serious dangers for street-based sex workers and prevents them from taking basic safety measures. We argued that a law that has the stated purpose of preventing public nuisance cannot be justified when it results in a risk of serious harm and death to marginalized women. The Supreme Court agreed.





Here is a summary of the judgment:

s. 210 (keeping or being found in a common bawdy house)

The SCC held that the bawdy house law violates sex workers’ constitutionally protected right to security of the person and is struck down. The Court found that this law prevents sex workers from working a fixed location that is safer than working on the street or meeting clients at different locations. (para 64)
Specifically, the Court stated that
  • “the harms identified by the courts below are grossly disproportionate to the deterrence of community disruption that is the object of the law. Parliament has the power to regulate against nuisances, but not at the cost of the health safety and lives of prostitutes. A law that prevents street-prostitutes from resorting to a safe haven such as Grandma’s House while a suspected serial killer prowls the streets, is a law that has lost sight of its purpose.” (para 136)
(Vancouver “safe house” set up to protect street walkers closed under threat of criminal sanction.)

s. 212(1)(j) (living on the avails of prostitution)
The SCC held that the living on the avails provision violates sex workers’ constitutionally protected right to security of the person and is struck down.
The SCC writes that the law is overbroad in that:
  • “The law punishes everyone who lives on the avails of prostitution without distinguishing between those who exploit prostitutes (such as controlling and abusive pimps) and those who could increase the safety and security of prostitutes (for example, legitimate drivers, managers, or bodyguards.” (para 142)
s. 213(1)(c) (communicating in public for the purpose of prostitution)
The SCC held that the communication law violates sex workers’ constitutionally protected right to security of the person and is struck down.
In the decision the court writes:
  • “By prohibiting communication in public for the purpose of prostitution, the law prevents prostitutes from screening clients and setting terms for the use of condoms or safe houses. In these ways, it significantly increases the risk they face.” (para 71)
In this way, the harms caused by the law is grossly disproportional to intended objective of the law. The court writes:
  • “If screening could have prevented one woman from jumping into Robert Pickton’s car, the severity of the harmful effects is established” (para 158)
This decision marks a huge step forward for sex workers’ rights and human rights in Canada.

The declaration of invalidity suspended for 1 year, during which time the federal government can consider whether to design new laws that comply with the Charter of Rights of Freedoms.

:zeichnung
The full decision written by Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin is available at:
http://scc-csc.lexum.com/decisia-scc-cs ... 9/index.do

Quelle: The decision in 705 words
Written by Darcie Bennett on December 20, 2013
www.pivotlegal.org/canada_v_bedford_a_s ... ada_ruling





Erstes Presseinterview mit beiden Parteien
[youtube][/youtube]





Press statements

Sex Professionals of Canada
http://spoc.ca/December%2017%202013.pdf

"“For decriminalization of prostitution to truly make a difference in our lives, sex workers must be in leadership roles for all decision making about regulations that impact our safety and livelihood including: zoning and licensing"
http://maggiesToronto.ca/press-releases?news_id=114

http://wsdb.concordia.ca/documents/SdBI ... reFrEn.pdf

http://aidslaw.ca/publications/interfac ... p?ref=2186
http://aidslaw.ca/publications/interfac ... p?ref=2103 swedish "model"

Action Canada for Population and Development
"This decision is crucial to the realization of sex workers’ rights to bodily autonomy and to have control over and decide freely upon all matters relating to their sexuality, free from violence, stigma and discrimination."
http://www.acpd.ca/index.php/archives/979
...

www.TerriJeanBedford.com




Sex Worker Rights Litigation
by PIVOT legal team
[youtube][/youtube]





Presseberichte

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-25468587
http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/top-court- ... -1.1601790
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2013/12/20 ... 78127.html

While the Ontario Court of Appeal had earlier concluded that a law against communicating in public for the purposes of prostitution complied with the Charter, the top court disagreed, and restored a lower court ruling that it does not.

Justice Minister Peter MacKay: “We are reviewing the decision and are exploring all possible options to ensure the criminal law continues to address the significant harms that flow from prostitution to communities, those engaged in prostitution, and vulnerable persons”.
http://o.canada.com/news/national/alert ... urt-rules/ with video and timeline

"Valerie Scott said sex workers should be able to work with the Canada Revenue Agency, be protected by occupational health and safety rules and workers’ compensation and “pension plans! Yes!” "
http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2013 ... _laws.html

The federal government had argued that prostitutes choose to accept the risks of an inherently dangerous trade, such as violence from customers ("Sind sie doch selbst Schuld, warum werden sie auch Sexworker!"). But the court said vulnerable individuals fall into prostitution not always of their own accord.
  • "The violence of a john does not diminish the role of the state in making a prostitute more vulnerable to that violence."
The ball is now back in the court of Justice Minister Peter MacKay from the Conservative government with Prime Minister Stephen Harper, who needs to decide whether to adopt new prohibitions.

Terri-Jean Bedford, one of three current and former prostitutes who brought the challenge to Canada’s prostitution laws, said in court documents she was abused as a child, entered prostitution at 16 to pay for her drug addictions and those of her 37-year-old boyfriend, and was "raped and gang-raped too many times to talk about" as a street prostitute in Winnipeg, Calgary and Vancouver.
http://m.theglobeandmail.com/news/natio ... e16067485/

What’s interesting about the ruling is the court recognition that laws regulating prostitution significantly contribute to the dangers women who engage in the sex trade face. As with any black market, the inability for participants to turn to law creates the framework for actual victimization. The ruling notes the disproportionate nature of anti-prostitution regulations
http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/20/canad ... down-prost

...



Deutschsprachig:

www.nzz.ch/aktuell/newsticker/gesetze-g ... 1.18208958

www.20min.ch/ausland/news/story/Kanada- ... n-23106166

Krasse manipulative Berichterstattung die Stimmung macht für Schwedische Verhältnisse
http://de.euronews.com/2013/12/21/kanad ... -erlauben/

...

Benutzeravatar
fraences
Admina
Admina
Beiträge: 7426
Registriert: 07.09.2009, 04:52
Wohnort: Frankfurt a. Main Hessen
Ich bin: Keine Angabe

RE: Länderberichte KANADA:

Beitrag von fraences »

Kanada will Prostitution erlauben

Wer glaubt ein Christ zu sein, weil er die Kirche besucht, irrt sich.Man wird ja auch kein Auto, wenn man in eine Garage geht. (Albert Schweitzer)

*****
Fakten und Infos über Prostitution

Doris67
PlatinStern
PlatinStern
Beiträge: 1127
Registriert: 20.06.2012, 10:16
Wohnort: Strasbourg
Ich bin: SexarbeiterIn

Beitrag von Doris67 »

Es kann dabei durchaus in einem Jahr eine noch viel sexarbeiterfeindlichere Gesetzeslage entstehen. Der wirkliche Kampf fängt jetzt erst an. Und er wird sehr hart und gewaltsam werden.
Mitglied der Confédération Nationale du Travail

Benutzeravatar
fraences
Admina
Admina
Beiträge: 7426
Registriert: 07.09.2009, 04:52
Wohnort: Frankfurt a. Main Hessen
Ich bin: Keine Angabe

RE: Länderberichte KANADA:

Beitrag von fraences »

Der Stand der Dinge ist in Kanada:

TORONTO – Two months since the Supreme Court struck down three prostitution-related prohibitions and gave Parliament one “buffer” year to come up with new legislation, prosecutors in some provinces are acting like the laws are already gone.

Prosecutors in Ontario and New Brunswick have stopped prosecuting crimes related to keeping a brothel, living on the avails of prostitution, and street soliciting.
Related Stories

Prostitution laws What Canada’s prostitution laws could look like in 2015
A chronology of Canadian prostitution laws
In December 2013, Canada's top court has unanimously struck down the country's prostitution laws. Feds ask public for input on prostitution law

Advocates for sex workers are pleased with the decision, but at least one MP is concerned that it’s setting a dangerous precedent.

“Basically what the provinces are doing now, is they’re cherry-picking the Criminal Code. So Canadians need to tell their elected people, keep the laws in place,” said Tory MP Joy Smith, who urged prosecutors in British Columbia to continue prosecuting the crimes. “That’s a very dangerous precedent to be set.”

Smith praised Alberta, where the deputy attorney-general issued a directive that the province would continue to prosecute prostitution-related offences within the confines of the landmark Bedford ruling.

Alberta Justice Minister Jonathan Denis said if they didn’t continue to prosecute the offences—like keeping a brothel—it would mean a “period of lawlessness.”

“It would not be unreasonable to foresee that you could see a brothel popping up in residential areas. It’s not unreasonable to see that you would even have human trafficking happening through this province,” Denis said. “And that’s not something that we’re willing to stand for in Alberta.”

British Columbia will also continue to prosecute the crimes in question on a case-by-case basis — until the federal government introduces legislation.

WATCH: Alberta will uphold existing prostitution laws

“I would say that the ball is clearly on the federal government’s lap to act as quickly as possible and bring in some new legislation that protects vulnerable people who are exploited as part of the sex trade,” said Denis.

And federal justice minister Peter MacKay said his department has been working to do just that: Drafting the sections of the criminal code to address the three laws “almost from the moment the Supreme Court issued its ruling.”

“We do intend to legislate in this area, make no mistake about it,” he said. “It’s not this government’s intention to leave that vulnerability, to leave that gap that was created by the Bedford decision.”
Terri-Jean Bedford

“My name is the Bedford in Bedford v. Canada,” said retired dominatrix Terri-Jean Bedford following the Supreme Court ruling. (Photo by: Aaron Vincent Elkaim/ The Canadian Press)
Aaron Vincent Elkaim/ The Canadian Press

Sources tell Global News the new legislation may come as early as a few months, and MacKay suggested the legislative solution could be based on Canada’s examination of models like the Nordic model-which criminalizes the purchase but allows the sale of sexual services.

“But this will be a Canadian solution, and we believe it will withstand constitutional scrutiny, and most importantly it will protect the public.”

Sex worker advocate Katrina Pacey doesn’t think the Nordic model is the right way to protect Canada’s sex workers. She hopes the federal government will look at the court’s findings and understand their rationale for striking down the three laws as unconstitutional.

Pacey, litigation director at Pivot Legal Society in Vancouver, works closely with sex workers. They’ve told her the so-called Nordic model would continue to cost lives.

WATCH: Prostitution advocate applauds provinces that have chosen not to prosecute prostitution offences

“It will continue to both put sex workers in egregious danger, at risk of very, very serious violence and murder, and create very significant human rights violations and probably land back in court,” she said. “So we hope to not have to go back to court to litigate further based on what the government proposes.”

Criminology professor Christine Bruckert said there’s no indication that decriminalizing sex work will cause an increase in prostitution, such as Alberta’s concern that brothels would be popping up on residential streets.

“New Zealand has shown us that when they decriminalized prostitution 10 years ago, there’s no evidence that there’s more brothels, more street-based sex workers,” said Bruckert, who is also a board member of POWER—a sex worker rights group in Ottawa.

She wants the government to follow through “in the spirit of the decision that was rendered in Bedford.” That’s something she doesn’t think the Nordic model can offer.

WATCH: Tory MP says some provincial justice ministers are “cherry picking” criminal code over prostitution laws

Bruckert said sex workers under that model continue to experience violence, and some in Sweden are at risk of being evicted; still being criminalized under laws besides the sex purchase act.

“It’s the same sort of harms that we see in the current system, which is why we are calling for a ‘Made in Canada’ solution that puts sex workers’ human and labour rights first,” she said.

Pacey also hopes for a shift away from criminalization to one that takes a labour and employment issue perspective. Street workers have told her that the best way the government can support their economic choices is to make sure they have support services.

“What we hope is the government will listen to sex workers…really understand that criminalization in all its forms—when it’s targeting consensual adult sex work—is nothing but purely harmful and restrictive.”

Pacey suggests using the criminal law to target specific harms already pinpointed by other Criminal Code provisions.

“Whether it’s the assault provisions, or intimidation, or extortion or trafficking, underage people that are sexually exploited…There’s a range of provisions in the Criminal Code that provide the protections that sex workers are seeking,” she said. “Laws that just target prostitution just because prostitution is taking place, is not only not helpful to sex workers, it’s extremely harmful.”

http://globalnews.ca/news/1157113/provi ... on-ruling/
Wer glaubt ein Christ zu sein, weil er die Kirche besucht, irrt sich.Man wird ja auch kein Auto, wenn man in eine Garage geht. (Albert Schweitzer)

*****
Fakten und Infos über Prostitution

Benutzeravatar
fraences
Admina
Admina
Beiträge: 7426
Registriert: 07.09.2009, 04:52
Wohnort: Frankfurt a. Main Hessen
Ich bin: Keine Angabe

RE: Länderberichte KANADA:

Beitrag von fraences »

New federal law on prostitution coming soon


OTTAWA — The federal government is poised to introduce legislation in the coming weeks that will overhaul Canada’s prostitution laws — possibly targeting the pimps and johns as criminals while leaving the prostitutes themselves free from criminal prosecution.

Justice Minister Peter MacKay has been exploring various options since the Supreme Court of Canada struck down Canada’s prostitution laws last December, giving the government a year to come up with a new law.

Among the alternatives being examined is a Canadian version of the “Nordic model” — an approach first used in Sweden which then spread to Norway and Iceland — in which police target prostitutes’ customers, pimps and sex-trade traffickers.

Earlier this month, MacKay said his bill will be drafted to find the “right balance” to a “complex” issue.

Two things have become apparent: the government will not decriminalize or legalize prostitution, as some other countries such as New Zealand and the Netherlands have done; and the governing Tories appear to be contemplating the Nordic model.

“We’ve looked at a lot of different options and a lot of different models,” MacKay said. “The Nordic model is one. I can assure you of this: it will be a Canadian solution.”

“We know that there is tremendous violence and vulnerability associated with prostitution,” MacKay added. “Prostitutes are predominantly victims. They have very much, in some cases, run out of options before entering this particular pursuit.”

He said there will be “support mechanisms outside the legislation in order to help people to transition out of the sex trade.”

His choice of words — and the goals — are similar to a proposal Manitoba Conservative MP Joy Smith has been circulating.

She has written a report, The Tipping Point, that argues Canada must make the elimination of prostitution its goal through future legislation, and that a form of the Nordic model is the best solution.

“The most effective route to tackling prostitution and sex trafficking is to address the demand for commercial sex by targeting the buyers of sex,” she writes.

“As a nation, we must ensure pimps and predators remain strongly sanctioned and prostituted women and girls are not criminalized.”

Smith argues that in addition to punishing those who buy sex, any new regime must also include “exit” programs to give prostitutes the things they need to get out of the sex trade: food, shelter, drug rehabilitation, counselling and education.

Moreover, she is calling for a national education program to make Canadians realize that prostitution is a form of violence against women.

“Our country has to recognize that this is Canada’s oldest oppression — not profession,” she said in an interview with the Citizen.

“It’s nothing but violence against women. Plain and simple. No matter how you paint it. We have to target the johns, the traffickers, the people who buy sex and go after trying to make money off of innocent victims.”

Smith said more than 90 per cent of prostitutes are “lured” into the sex trade and become victims who are “held captive by beatings” and “have no place to go.”

“They develop these Stockholm Syndromes, where they get attached to their perpetrator. They get almost like they are brainwashed. There’s no way out. They get despondent. And it’s very dangerous for them.“

At its policy convention in Calgary last November, the Conservative party adopted a resolution stating it “shall develop a Canada-specific plan to target the purchasers of sex and human trafficking markets through criminalizing the purchase of sex as well as any third party attempting to profit from the purchase of sex.”

But others, including some prostitutes and academics, are warning against the Nordic model, saying it will merely force the sex trade underground and leave prostitutes in greater danger of being harmed.

Christine Bruckert, a former prostitute who is now a criminology professor at the University of Ottawa, said that if the government chooses Smith’s proposal, the sex trade will continue.

She said that in a system where just the customers are charged by police, those “clients” will be nervous about getting caught by police and will insist to prostitutes that they meet in dark places — not open streets.

“If the client will only accept her as a date if she jumps in the car quickly, that’s what she is going to do. She’s not going to take time to see if he is a risk.”

Bruckert said the law would eventually end up back at the Supreme Court and be ruled unconstitutional because it fails to protect prostitutes from danger.

“The sad thing is that until that time, the most marginal sex workers are going to be at greater risk and they’re going to get hurt, and they’re going to get killed.”

Bruckert said those advocating the Nordic model are adopting a paternalistic attitude.

“It’s about taking an ideological stand: Sex work is wrong, women are victims. It’s about people saying if you are a sex worker, and you say you want to be a sex worker, you must be either deluded or mentally ill or not even know that you’re making a bad choice.”

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/touch/news ... rel=825269
Wer glaubt ein Christ zu sein, weil er die Kirche besucht, irrt sich.Man wird ja auch kein Auto, wenn man in eine Garage geht. (Albert Schweitzer)

*****
Fakten und Infos über Prostitution

Benutzeravatar
fraences
Admina
Admina
Beiträge: 7426
Registriert: 07.09.2009, 04:52
Wohnort: Frankfurt a. Main Hessen
Ich bin: Keine Angabe

RE: Länderberichte KANADA:

Beitrag von fraences »

Prostitution bill would make it illegal to buy, sell sex in public

Hier kurze Zusammenfassung:

-Der Sexkauf wird verboten (Schwedisches Modell)
-Prostitution in der Öffentlichkeit verboten, wo Kinder in der Nähe sein könnten
-Die Werbung für Sexarbeit sowohl Print, wie Online verboten.
-Zuhälterei
-von Prostitution zu profetieren


Justice Minister Peter MacKay says sex workers could face prosecution, mostly 'fines'

he federal government has tabled proposed prostitution legislation it says would target johns and pimps, but would also make it illegal to sell sexual services in public spaces where children could be present.

"We are criminalizing the purchase of sexual services and in very specific instances the sale … in areas where young people under the age of 18 could be present," Justice Minister Peter MacKay said during a news conference after the bill was tabled in the House of Commons.


The bill – dubbed the protection of communities and exploited persons act – would put a heavy emphasis on fines for those who purchase sexual services in public places.

While MacKay said the aim of the bill is not to target prostitutes, he said they could face prosecution if found to be selling their services in public spaces where children might be present.

"They would face fines in most instances," MacKay said.

The bill would also criminalize the advertising of sexual services.

NDP justice critic Françoise Boivin is also expected to hold a news conference to give her party's views on the proposed legislation.


The justice minister said the bill would target johns and the pimps who sell and profit from prostitution, rather than the prostitutes themselves.

"The bill recognizes that the vast majority of those who sell sexual services do not do so by choice. We view the vast majority of those involved in selling sexual services as victims," MacKay said.

Sex workers will go to jail

Katrina Pacey, a lawyer for Pivot Legal Society, an intervener in the case to reform the country's anti-prostitution laws, has concerns about the proposed legislation.

"This is in fact full criminalization of prostitution ... which is going to result in sex workers going to jail."

"The minister has found various ways to limit all of the safe ways for sex-trade work," Pacey said.

Mackay said, "no model that involves full decriminalization or legalization will ever make prostitution a safe endeavour.”

You can read the text of the bill here:


http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/prostit ... -1.2664683

Ein trauriger Tag für Kanada. Ein trauriger Tag für die Sexworker.
Zuletzt geändert von fraences am 05.06.2014, 00:16, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.
Wer glaubt ein Christ zu sein, weil er die Kirche besucht, irrt sich.Man wird ja auch kein Auto, wenn man in eine Garage geht. (Albert Schweitzer)

*****
Fakten und Infos über Prostitution

Benutzeravatar
fraences
Admina
Admina
Beiträge: 7426
Registriert: 07.09.2009, 04:52
Wohnort: Frankfurt a. Main Hessen
Ich bin: Keine Angabe

RE: Länderberichte KANADA:

Beitrag von fraences »

The new sex work legislation explained


On December 20, 2013 the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that the laws regulating prostitution were unconstitutional and gave the Federal Conservatives one year to consider whether to design new laws that comply with the Charter of Rights of Freedoms.

Today Justice Minister Peter MacKay tabled the Conservative Government's long anticipated new prostitution legislation. The Protection of Communities and Exploited Persons Act criminalizing the purchase of sex, communicating for the purpose of selling sex, living off the avails of prostitution, and the advertising sexual services.

This cynical, dystopic model does not resolve the problems found by the Court in Bedford to be unconstitutional, and adds new ones such as the prohibition on advertising. The Charter rights engaged by this draft law include life, liberty, security of the person, freedom of expression and equality. Arguably all are breached.

This is not the “Nordic” approach, nor is it a Canadian variation on the “Nordic” approach. It is an unconstitutional variation of our broken laws that impose more danger, more criminalization, and fewer safe options, contrary to the requirement of the Supreme Court of Canada to address these dangerous and ineffective laws.

This made in Canada model will lead to continued epidemic of violence against sex workers in Canada.

Here is a look at some of the specific provisions:

Provision 213: “Stopping or impeding traffic and Communicating to provide sexual services for consideration”
There is only one thing different about the Communicating provision than the pre-Bedford regime. What was previously section 213(1)(c) of the Code now applies only to communicating “in a public place, or in any place open to public view”, “for the purpose of offering or providing sexual services for consideration”, that is or is next to a place “where persons under the age of 18 can reasonably to be expected to present.”

All other aspects of section 213, including stopping or impeding traffic, remain criminalized and apply to everyone. These offenses remain summary offences.

Constitutional Implications:
This amounts to a version of the Communicating law in Bedford that is only marginally narrower, and defies the spirit of the judgment, which was concerned with the displacement of sex workers and blocking the ability to screen clients for safety. All that will be required for police to surveil and target sex workers is the suggestion that a person under the age of 18 can reasonably be expected to be present. This law will function in a highly similar fashion to the Communicating provision that the Bedford court struck down for creating dangerous circumstances, and will violate section 7 of the Charter.

Provision 286: Prohibition against the purchase of sexual services
“Commodification of Sexual Activity”
s. 286.1(1): Obtaining Sexual Services for Consideration
This single aspect of the law is similar to the Nordic model, in that it applies to purchasing or communicating in order to obtain sexual services.

This provision criminalizes everyone who, in any place, purchases or communicates in order to obtain sexual services. This provision adds mandatory fines to all violations. Sanctions can range from mandatory minimum fines ranging from $500 to $4,000, to five years in jail. These new mandatory fines are higher for repeat offenders and for anyone who purchases sex in a place where a person under 18 could reasonably be found.

The addition of tough punishments for clients will force sex workers to go to great lengths in order to help their clients avoid these sanctions. This will recreate the dangerous conditions that the court in Bedford said made the criminal law unconstitutional.

Key Considerations: Prohibiting the purchase of sexual services creates extremely dangerous conditions for sex workers. In Sweden, Norway and in Canadian cities where law enforcement is directed at clients, sex workers are displaced to unsafe areas, do not have time to screen clients, have diminished access to police protection and are less able to operate in safe indoor venues. In Norway, violence against sex workers increased following the enactment of the law. Two recent reports about sex work in Vancouver found that street-based sex workers are facing extremely dangerous working conditions as a result of law enforcement targeted at their clients.

Constitutional Implications: While criminalizing the purchase of sexual services is said to be aimed at protecting sex workers, this prohibition will have the same harmful impact as the current adult prostitution laws that were struck down by the Supreme Court of Canada in Bedford. For this reason, a ban on purchasing sex or communicating for the purpose to obtain sexual services, would violate the security of the person rights of sex workers, which are protected by s. 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Provision 286.2: “Material Benefit from Sexual Services”
The new provision continues to criminalize those who gain material benefits from sex work. This replaces the “living on the avails” provision that was struck down in Bedford.

This version of the law does not apply to those in “legitimate living arrangements” or with “legal or moral obligations” to sex workers. It does apply to exploitative and abusive relationships, and to those in which a person supplies drugs or alcohol.

The provision includes as an aggravating factor the fact that sexual services are part of a commercial enterprise. This means that the provision includes an aggravating factor that is already an element of the offence.

Key Considerations:
Being able to work together or to employ safety services is a key component of a safe sex trade.
This provision does not assist in making this more possible for most sex workers.

It will only apply to occasional ad hoc services for sex workers. It does not allow sex workers to establish regular secure conditions for themselves.

The clarifications around exploitative relationships may be of assistance but in a very limited capacity.

Constitutional Implications:
It still impairs the ability of sex workers to retain assistance in their work through employees or contractors. The provision applies to benefits received in the context of a commercial enterprise offering sexual services.

The bill also intrudes in personal relationships by exempting “legitimate living arrangements”.

This provision does not remedy the problem the SCC addressed by striking down the living on the avails provision. It introduces uncertainty, criminalizes relationships intended to improve safety, and recreates the same harms.

Provision 286.4: Advertising Sexual Services
The bill proposes to ban any advertising of sexual services, stating:

Everyone who knowingly advertises an offer to provide sexual services for consideration is guilty of
(a) an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term of not more than five years; or
(b) an offence punishable on summary conviction and liable to imprisonment for a term on not more than 18 months.

Key Considerations: This is an entirely new provision that attempts to radically change the sex trade in Canada. Without the ability to advertise in newspapers, online, or other forms of media, sex workers will now have severely limited means for working safely indoors. This is particularly concerning given that the court in Bedford clearly found that the ability to operate in safe indoor venues is a key measure for sex workers to reduce their risk. This new provision does not ban working indoors itself, which is not surprising given that the Supreme Court of Canada clearly stated that such a law would violate theCharter. But this new provision makes the option of safe indoor work all but impossible.

We should also have serious doubts about the capacity of the state to enforce this law, and the extraordinary resources that such enforcement would absorb.

Constitutional Implications: By restricting the ability of sex workers to effectively work indoors, this provision engages sex workers section 7 rights in that increases the risks faced by sex workers. It also violates sex worker’s section 2(b) rights by restricting their freedom of expression. This is a very misguided law, which is contrary to both the letter and spirit of the Supreme Court’s decision in Bedford. There is little question that Canadian courts would declare this new prohibition on advertising to be unconstitutional.

http://www.pivotlegal.org/the_new_sex_w ... _explained
Wer glaubt ein Christ zu sein, weil er die Kirche besucht, irrt sich.Man wird ja auch kein Auto, wenn man in eine Garage geht. (Albert Schweitzer)

*****
Fakten und Infos über Prostitution

Benutzeravatar
fraences
Admina
Admina
Beiträge: 7426
Registriert: 07.09.2009, 04:52
Wohnort: Frankfurt a. Main Hessen
Ich bin: Keine Angabe

RE: Länderberichte KANADA:

Beitrag von fraences »

Interview mit der Anwältin Katrin Pacey

http://www.cbc.ca/player/News/Politics/ID/2462160231/
Wer glaubt ein Christ zu sein, weil er die Kirche besucht, irrt sich.Man wird ja auch kein Auto, wenn man in eine Garage geht. (Albert Schweitzer)

*****
Fakten und Infos über Prostitution

Doris67
PlatinStern
PlatinStern
Beiträge: 1127
Registriert: 20.06.2012, 10:16
Wohnort: Strasbourg
Ich bin: SexarbeiterIn

Beitrag von Doris67 »

Diese Vorlage dürfte vor Gericht landen.
Mitglied der Confédération Nationale du Travail

Benutzeravatar
fraences
Admina
Admina
Beiträge: 7426
Registriert: 07.09.2009, 04:52
Wohnort: Frankfurt a. Main Hessen
Ich bin: Keine Angabe

RE: Länderberichte KANADA:

Beitrag von fraences »

More opposition to Tory prostitution bill emerges as marathon hearings begin

http://globalnews.ca/news/1435970/more- ... ngs-begin/
Wer glaubt ein Christ zu sein, weil er die Kirche besucht, irrt sich.Man wird ja auch kein Auto, wenn man in eine Garage geht. (Albert Schweitzer)

*****
Fakten und Infos über Prostitution

Benutzeravatar
fraences
Admina
Admina
Beiträge: 7426
Registriert: 07.09.2009, 04:52
Wohnort: Frankfurt a. Main Hessen
Ich bin: Keine Angabe

Beitrag von fraences »

C-36 won't help indigenous women, MPs told

Naomi Sayers, of Canadian Alliance For Sex Work Law Reform, says regulation of sex work is better than criminalization.

http://www.cbc.ca/player/News/Politics/ID/2471496264/
Wer glaubt ein Christ zu sein, weil er die Kirche besucht, irrt sich.Man wird ja auch kein Auto, wenn man in eine Garage geht. (Albert Schweitzer)

*****
Fakten und Infos über Prostitution