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Criminalizing Prostitution In Bill C-36

178 Words1 Pages
Although Bill C-36 is titled the Protection of Communities and Exploited Persons it seems to only have regard for the ‘protection of communities’. It does so by tethering the idea of nuisance to sex work. By criminalizing prostitution, the Bill puts citizenship of prostitutes beyond reach by perpetuating the notion that sex work is a nuisance (Campbell, 2015). By viewing prostitution as a crime that disrupts the order of a community, sex workers are assimilated into ‘things’ that carry the risk of public contamination and corruption (Campbell, 2015; Hayes-Smith & Shekarkhar, 2010). Much like the ‘unrepaired broken window’ which Wilson and Kelling (1982) indicate signals a lack of social control in a neighborhood, sex work is viewed as a threat
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