Date: November 22, 2024 Fri
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Results for street prostitution (canada)
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Author: Louie, Christine G.
Title: Community Attitudes to Street Prostitution: The Downtown Eastside and Strathcona
Summary: In 2006, the House of Commons “Subcommittee on Solicitation Laws” agreed unanimously that Canada’s prostitution laws are “unacceptable” and need to be changed, but its members could not agree on how to change them. Consequently, this thesis explores the experiences and attitudes of residents and business-persons to prostitution law and social policy in an area that has long been a host to street prostitution: Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside. The research involved an on-line questionnaire on respondents’ attitudes to prostitution laws, safety issues, street prostitution control, and their experiences with street prostitution. The study found that while respondents (n=122) did not want street prostitution in residential areas, they did support indoor and street prostitution in non-residential areas as well as policies that aim to increase sex workers’ personal safety. Seventy-six percent of residents thought that the sale of sex should be legal and 72% thought that buying a sexual service from an adult should be legal. Seventy-five percent of residents think that the government should decriminalize adult prostitution in Canada.
Details: Burnaby, BC: Simon Fraser University, School of Criminology, 2009.
Source: Internet Resource: Thesis: Accessed April 22, 2013 at: http://184.70.147.70/lowman_prostitution/HTML/CAP/Louie_Community_Attitudes_to_Street_Prostitution.pdf
Year: 2009
Country: Canada
URL:
Shelf Number: 128423
Keywords: Nuisance Behaviors and DisordersProstitutesPublic OpinionSex WorkersStreet Prostitution (Canada) |