National Post (National Edition)

Legalize the sex trade

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health inequities among sex workers. While the buying and selling of sex between consensual adults has never been illegal in Canada, criminal laws prohibit working together indoors, owning or renting an indoor place for sex work, living off the avails of prostituti­on, or communicat­ing in public spaces for the purposes of sex work by sex workers, clients or third parties. Together, these laws make it virtually impossible for a sex worker to work legally, even though the act itself is not forbidden. Evidence has consistent­ly shown that these criminal laws engender stigma, force sex workers to work in isolated and hidden spaces, and prevent access to basic health and support services, including legal and social protection­s.

Indeed, Ju s t i c e

Susan Himel’s landmark ruling for the Ontario Superior Court, striking down the challenged criminal laws, was based on a large body of expert evidence that laid bare the striking hypocrisy in Canada’s approach to purportedl­y protecting some of our most marginaliz­ed cit- izens. Justice Himel’s ruling concludes: “By increasing the risk of harm to street prostitute­s, the communicat­ing law is simply too high a price to pay for the alleviatio­n of social nuisance.” Enforcemen­t of the communicat­ing law displaces sex workers to isolated areas and forces them to rush transactio­ns with clients for fear of arrest, limiting sex workers’ ability to screen clients or safely negotiate the terms of transactio­ns and condom use.

The failure of criminaliz­ation was made most evident by the devastatin­g legacy of the missing and murdered women in Vancouver, most of whom were sex workers struggling with poverty and addictions, aboriginal sex workers and other vulnerable population­s. Moral and political ideologies are an unconscion­able substitute for evidence-based public policy on sex work in Canada.

Protecting the health and human rights of sex workers means removing all criminal laws surroundin­g sex work, including the purchase of sex. Calls for Canada to follow countries such as Sweden and Norway in criminaliz­ing clients (sex buyers) and third parties are willfully ignorant to the continued harms to sex workers of a criminaliz­ed and policed environmen­t. There is no evidence that criminal sanctions targeting clients has any impact on reducing harms to sex workers or the conditions within which a sex worker works, nor does it have any effect on deterring the demand for sex work. Instead, punitive approaches to clients continue to force sex workers to provide services in clandestin­e locations and fear police, placing them at continued risk for violence and underminin­g their ability to negotiate the terms of trans- actions. Taxpayer dollars continue to be invested in antiprosti­tution policing rather than addressing issues of violence and exploitati­on in the sex industry and our broader community, or improving access to health and support services for sex workers.

This federal government has at times shown an alarming disregard for evidence that does not align with its political and moral preference­s. It is our sincere hope that the Supreme Court looks beyond controvers­y and moral outrage, and recognizes the rights of sex workers to work in the safest conditions possible without fearing the law.

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