The recent Ontario trial decision in Bedford suggests three interrelated principles that municipal law makers should consider when formulating bylaws aimed at regulating sex work. These principles, if upheld on appeal, will inform the constitutionality of both current and prospective bylaws regulating sex work in Canadian cities. In Bedford, Justice Himel concluded that the constitutionality of laws regulating the sex trade must be determined in a legal context which recognizes the violence faced by sex workers. She confirmed that laws that indirectly make sex work more dangerous and harmful must be consistent with those principles that our legal system, through its courts, have deemed fundamental to a just society. She recognized that in a...
In 2007, one current and two former sex workers, Amy Lebovitch, Terri-Jean Bedford and Valerie Scott...
The future of Canada’s laws related to prostitution has become an urgent public policy issue in the ...
Until recently, Canada criminalized anyone who lived "wholly or in part on the avails of prostitutio...
The recent Ontario trial decision in Bedford suggests three interrelated principles that municipal l...
The recent Ontario trial decision in Bedford suggests three interrelated principles that municipal l...
In Bedford v. Canada, two levels of Ontario courts ruled that a selection of criminal laws prohibiti...
The debate over how to regulate sex work in Canada has long occupied courts, governments, policymake...
In Canada, the sale of sex for money was not illegal under the former legislative structure. Regardl...
The jurisprudence of prostitution in Canada suggests laws surrounding the practice have to date crea...
In Canada (Attorney General) v. Bedford, the Supreme Court struck down Canada’s prostitution laws on...
Canadian prostitution laws adopt a paternalistic approach that contradicts the objective of safeguar...
Bill C-36 (Protection of Communities and Exploited Persons Act) marks a turning point in Canada’s ap...
R v NS, 2022 ONCA 160 is the latest decision on the constitutional validity of Canada's sex work law...
In 2013 the Supreme Court Of Canada struck down laws related to prostitution in the case Canada (Att...
Prostitution, sex in exchange for consideration, has never been illegal in Canada; however, activiti...
In 2007, one current and two former sex workers, Amy Lebovitch, Terri-Jean Bedford and Valerie Scott...
The future of Canada’s laws related to prostitution has become an urgent public policy issue in the ...
Until recently, Canada criminalized anyone who lived "wholly or in part on the avails of prostitutio...
The recent Ontario trial decision in Bedford suggests three interrelated principles that municipal l...
The recent Ontario trial decision in Bedford suggests three interrelated principles that municipal l...
In Bedford v. Canada, two levels of Ontario courts ruled that a selection of criminal laws prohibiti...
The debate over how to regulate sex work in Canada has long occupied courts, governments, policymake...
In Canada, the sale of sex for money was not illegal under the former legislative structure. Regardl...
The jurisprudence of prostitution in Canada suggests laws surrounding the practice have to date crea...
In Canada (Attorney General) v. Bedford, the Supreme Court struck down Canada’s prostitution laws on...
Canadian prostitution laws adopt a paternalistic approach that contradicts the objective of safeguar...
Bill C-36 (Protection of Communities and Exploited Persons Act) marks a turning point in Canada’s ap...
R v NS, 2022 ONCA 160 is the latest decision on the constitutional validity of Canada's sex work law...
In 2013 the Supreme Court Of Canada struck down laws related to prostitution in the case Canada (Att...
Prostitution, sex in exchange for consideration, has never been illegal in Canada; however, activiti...
In 2007, one current and two former sex workers, Amy Lebovitch, Terri-Jean Bedford and Valerie Scott...
The future of Canada’s laws related to prostitution has become an urgent public policy issue in the ...
Until recently, Canada criminalized anyone who lived "wholly or in part on the avails of prostitutio...