Sex Professionals Of Canada
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Sex Professionals of Canada (SPOC) is a Canadian activism group. SPOC was formed in 1983 and campaigns through public education and legal challenges to decriminalize
Canadian prostitution laws Canadians (french: Canadiens) are people identified with the country of Canada. This connection may be residential, legal, historical or cultural. For most Canadians, many (or all) of these connections exist and are collectively the source of ...
.


History

Founded in 1983, SPOC has developed into a volunteer activist organization that is entirely run by sex workers. The organization stands "for the decriminalization of all forms of sex work in Canada" and relies on donations for financial support. According to the SPOC website, the organization's mission and principles are listed as: *SPOC is a volunteer-run activist network that engages in advocacy and education. *SPOC operates on the principle that all forms of consensual adult sex work are valid occupations. *SPOC maintains that sex workers have the capacity for choice and our experiences are diverse. *SPOC maintains that sex workers deserve labour rights, and occupational health and safety standards defined by sex workers themselves. *SPOC members and associates oppose those who seek to ‘rescue’ sex workers using force or coercive measures including court imposed re-education/exit programs, jails or camps.


Key people

The organization's executive director is Amy Lebovitch; its deputy director is Eve Anderson; SPOC's "Exec-at-Large" is Julie Grant; and Valerie Scott is the Legal Co-ordinator.


''Bedford v. Canada''

On March 20, 2007, Valerie Scott, Amy Lebovitch and Terri-Jean Bedford initiated an application ('' Bedford v. Canada'') in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice seeking the constitutional invalidation of s.210 (bawdy house), s.212(1)(j) (living on the avails) and s.213(1)(c) (communicating for the purpose of prostitution) of the Criminal Code.


References


External links


Sex Professionals of Canada


{{Prostitution in Canada 1983 establishments in Canada Sex worker organizations Political advocacy groups in Canada Prostitution in Canada