1.
A) During the 1950s and 1960s, there was very little political attention paid to prostitution. It was not until the mid 1970s that perceived problems with the prostitution law began to show. In 1983, the Liberal government appointed the Special Committee on Pornography and Prostitution to consider changing the policy. However, the Conservative government that received the report in 1985, rejected the law changes the Special Committee recommended, opting instead to rewrite street prostitution. Since then the murder of somewhere between 200 and 300 street prostitutes have prompted renewed calls for law reform. The majority held that consenting adult prostitution should be legal, while the minority held that it should be banned. 60 years later,
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The first recorded law dealing with the issue of prostitution was in Nova Scotia in 1759. Following the Canadian Confederation in 1867, the laws were solidified in the Criminal Code in 1892. These were aimed specifically at pimping, operating brothels, and …show more content…
There was two reported cases that were the turning point of this social change; Bedford V Canada and (insert name). Bedford V Canada was a group of people who decided that the prostitution laws were outdated. They felt like the laws shouldn’t be to stop prostitution from happening but to protect the women. It should allow women to make the decision to be prostitute. The case that they made was that prostitution still exists and the women live in fear that they can’t report the cases of rape and abuse that they undergo due the criminalization of being a prostitute. (insect name) is a British Columbia community group that made the case that criminalizing prostitution was conflicting with the Charter of Rights and Freedom section 2 the right to liberty, security, and freedom of expression. In 2012, the Supreme Court of Canada cleared this case to proceed to trial. These were the two most influential cases of the decriminalization of