up date- from the author of the report
Obviously an incredibly disappointing and stigmatizing article, and a
horrible example of how research can be misrepresented in the media. As
Michael mentioned, the papers for the Maka Project can be found on the
WISH website - highlighting (as many of you know) how criminalization,
policing and violence can directly lead to poor health outcomes among sex
workers.
Attached is a response to yesterday's article that I am submitting to the
Vancouver Sun - our community partners, WISH and Sex Workers United
Against Violence (SWUAV) have read and supported the article, as has the
BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS.
I am away until the end of the week (so apologies on my delay on weighing
in)…
Kate
Reforming Canada’s criminalized sex work legislation, not sex workers,
need to be the target of HIV prevention efforts
Re: “One quarter of Vancouver sex trade workers infected with HIV”, March
5th 2009
The sensationalized story on a report authored by McInnes et al from the
BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS drastically misrepresents HIV rates
among sex workers. These rates were drawn from a 2006 study co-authored by
myself and the WISH Drop-In Centre Society. What Ms. Fayerman’s article
and the McInnes report fail to acknowledge is that this small sample of
women who exchange sex for survival also inject and smoke drugs, live in
poverty, and face extreme rates of violence, exploitation, and murder.
However, the major failure of Ms. Fayerman’s article is that it ignores a
large body of evidence and erroneously stigmatizes some of the most
vulnerable and criminalized women in Canadian society. In several recent
studies we have shown that enforcement of criminal sanctions targeting sex
workers are forcing women to work in dark, isolated areas, restricting
their access to safer indoor spaces, and directly reducing their ability
to negotiate condom use and protect themselves from violence. These
findings, supported by statements by the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon
at the UN High Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS in 2008, demonstrate that
reforming criminalized sex work legislation, not sex workers, needs to be
the primary target of HIV prevention efforts, both in Canada and globally.
Dr. Kate Shannon, British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS;
University of British Columbia;
kshannon@cfenet.ubc.ca
In both the Times Colonist and the Sun (Sun's version is shortened):
http://www.timescolonist.com/Health/work+study+missed+mark/1365015/story.html
http://www.vancouversun.com/opinion/letters/study+based+solely+street+prostitutes/1364329/story.html