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Lack of Confidence in Police Creates a “Blue Ceiling” for Sex Workers' Safety

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Lack of Confidence in Police Creates a “Blue Ceiling” for Sex Workers' Safety
Abstract
Confidence in the police is fundamental to citizens' willingness to report unlawful behaviour, share intelligence about crime, seek help when victimized, and generally comply with the law. Marginalized groups overwhelmingly report a lack of confidence that police will apply the law fairly. Although sex work research reports a wide range of negative experiences with the police, it is not known how common these experiences are because most research focuses solely on street-based sex workers and does not include quantitative measures. We report on confidence in the police through the analysis of relevant data gathered from in-person interviews with sex workers from six census metropolitan areas of Canada. Under the pre-2014 legal regime, our non-random sample of sex workers had lower confidence in police than estimated for other Canadians by the General Social Survey and were particularly unlikely to see police as treating sex workers fairly. Thematic analysis suggests this is primarily driven by stigma and discrimination. We also found a significant minority who reported the police to be a source of aid, suggesting that appropriate policy and program regimes could be developed to improve sex worker–police relations.
Publication
Canadian Public Policy
Volume
42
Issue
4
Pages
456-468
Date
December 2016
Language
en
ISSN
0317-0861, 1911-9917
Accessed
7/22/18, 7:50 PM
Library Catalog
Crossref
Citation
Benoit, C., Smith, M., Jansson, M., Magnus, S., Ouellet, N., Atchison, C., Casey, L., Phillips, R., Reimer, B., Reist, D., & Shaver, F. M. (2016). Lack of Confidence in Police Creates a “Blue Ceiling” for Sex Workers’ Safety. Canadian Public Policy, 42(4), 456–468. https://doi.org/10.3138/cpp.2016-006