Research-to-KT

National Evaluation of Canada’s End-Demand Work Laws

UBC/ Ottawa U Research Project

PI(s): Dr. Kate Shannon, Dr. Christine Bruckert

Host: UBC / Ottawa University

Funders: SSHCR Partnership Grant – Gender, Work & Health

The National Evaluation of Canada’s End-Demand Work Laws used a gender and labour lens to conduct a national evaluation of the impact of legal reform and policy on the working conditions as well as occupational health and safety in the sex industry in Canada. Developed in response to a SSHRC/CIHR call for partnership grants on Gender, Work and Health, it seeked to assess the impact of “end demand” sex work laws implemented by the Canadian government in 2014 on sex workers’ safety, health, and human rights.

The research was a UBC/ Ottawa U academic partnership with community-based organizations and transversal advisory groups of Indigenous, Black, transgender and migrant sex workers. It drew on mixed methods data and interviews with 200 sex workers in five cities across Canada from 2017 to 2018: Montreal, Québec; Toronto, Ontario; Ottawa, Ontario; Sudbury, Ontario; and Surrey, British Columbia. The project holds ethics approvals at both UBC  and University of Ottawa.

Research Questions
  • How are the working conditions within this transformed legal and policy landscape of the “end demand” approach impacting the occupational health, safety and well-being of women, men, gender non-binary and Two-Spirit sex workers?
  • How will the legal and policy frameworks at both the federal level (e.g. end demand approach) and municipal levels (e.g. licensing, local policing, workplace safety standards) intersect with other structural and gendered factors, such as racism, migration, stigma, poverty to shape working conditions?
  • How can we apply gender, labour, and human rights frameworks to develop evidence-based and gender-transformative solutions to improve working conditions for sex workers in Canada to best promote their health, safety and human rights?
About End-Demand

Team

Principal Investigators: Dr. Kate Shannon, Dr. Christine Bruckert

Key Team Members: Dr. Anna-Louise Crago, UBC Project Team Lead; Kerry Porth, UBC Project Coordinator; Robyn Maynard & Anna Aude Cauoette, Expert Consultants & Traversal Group Chairs

Partners/Advisory

Stella, Maggies, Butterfly, POWER, PACE, SWUAV, SWAN, Hustle

Funders

SSHRC/CIHR Gender, Work & Health Partnership Grant