Thursday, April 23, 2015

CANADA MILITARY NEWS- Exploitation -Trafficking/Canada : Local Safety Audit Guide: To Prevent Trafficking in Persons And Related Exploitation/IDLE NO MORE- O Canada all our women and girls matter #1BRising





Consent remains hard concept to grasp

Survey finds youth confused by definitions of consensual sex


Nova Scotia’s First Sexual Violence Strategy

Sexual violence is a serious health, social and public safety issue in Nova Scotia. We know that incidents of sexual violence are under-reported in our province. In April 2014, work began to develop Nova Scotia’s first provincial sexual violence strategy with implementation targeted for 2015. As we pass the mid-way point in our development work, we are taking the opportunity to share with you what we heard.

Recent Developments

Youth Engagement on the Topic of Sexualized Violence in Nova Scotia
Youth Engagement Summary




Questions or comments?

Contact us: strategy@gov.ns.ca


MICHAEL GORMAN PROVINCIAL REPORTER

mgor man@herald.ca @MichaelTGor man

Despite high-profile examples, such as the case of Rehtaeh Parsons, many young people still have varying definitions of what constitutes sexual consent.

That finding, and a wealth of other information, is from the results of a youth engagement survey released on Wednesday by the Community Services Department, just weeks ahead of the release of the department’s sexual violence strategy.

Community Services Minister Joanne Bernard said she was particularly struck by the confusion regarding consent as well as concerns that young people don’t feel that available services reflect their needs.

Bernard said youth engagement will continue and she now has information to bring to cabinet colleagues to discuss what other departments — such as health and education — can do to augment services, including school curriculum focusing on consent, healthy relationships and sexual violence.

“We know kids between the ages of 14 up until 25, really, are the highest risks of being a victim and a perpetrator," Bernard said at Province House.

Some of the information in the youth survey complements what will be in the final strategy and some of it will be part of ongoing efforts to address youth issues, said the minister.

In the survey, young people identified a number of issues they believe need more attention and education, as well as barriers to seeking help. Those barriers include concerns about confidentiality, lack of transportation options, hours of operation, perceived negative reactions from service providers and feeling unwelcome because of gender or sexual orientation.

Respondents also provided feedback on how to create welcoming and supportive environments for young people who need help, thoughts on the justice system, the role that schools play and ideas for ways to prevent sexualized violence.

The full report can be found at novascotia.ca/coms/svs
http://novascotia.ca/coms/svs/





Traffickers, Enablers, Users – Labour Exploitation
·       What is known about people exploiting labour in your city and catchment area?
·       What industries may use or enable labour exploitation?
·       Who are the enablers/observers of labour exploitation?
·       How big is the problem?
·       What services or programs are targeting the demand side of labour exploitation?
·       Are there any codes of ethics for companies?
Do local companies monitor their supply chain?



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TRAFFICKING OF WOMEN- GIRLS AND BOYS 4 SEX.....  SLAVE WORK
CANADA: Local Safety Audit Guide: To Prevent Trafficking in Persons And Related Exploitation



·         1. Introduction
·         Legal framework
·         Victims
·         Working in a participatory way
·         Economic and social issues
·         Trafficking and exploitation
·         Deciding on priorities
·         Opportunities
·         9.1 Aboriginal women and girls
·         10. Addressing demand
·         Annexes
·         Notes
Part I: Trafficking in Persons – Global and Canadian Context
1. Introduction
This guide is designed to contribute to the development of strategic action plans to prevent human trafficking and other related forms of violence and exploitation in Canada’s urban centres, and to address the factors which make particular groups far more vulnerable to sexual exploitation and/or forced labour than others.[1] It uses a sound evidence-based approach, and explicitly considers gender and other intersecting factors which influence an individual’s vulnerability.[2] It will enable stakeholders from the public sector and civil society to assess the nature and extent of these problems in their particular urban area, and to develop an action plan tailored to those problems and their local context.[3]
The need for unified action – in Canada and internationally – to prevent human trafficking, a modern form of slavery, which violates fundamental human rights, is clear. The Government of Canada’s National Action Plan (2012)[4] seeks to accelerate action against trafficking in relation to prevention, prosecution, and protection of victims, and to foster partnerships which are vital to achieving progress in each of these areas.
Human trafficking is a complex crime which is facilitated by many factors, including the vulnerability of particular populations to exploitation, complicity or ignorance on the part of civil society, and the demand for particular goods and services. Human trafficking involves the recruitment, transportation, harbouring and/or exercising control, direction or influence over the movements of a person in order to exploit that person, typically through sexual exploitation or forced labour. Trafficking may occur entirely in one country or involve individuals being trafficked from other countries. It may involve illegal migrants who find themselves exploited once they arrive in Canada. It may involve people legitimately entering the country under foreign worker programs,[5] but whose treatment and conditions of work amount to exploitation.
The guide is of particular relevance to:
·         Provincial, territorial and local government representatives and service providers responsible for and/or contributing to policies concerned with human trafficking and related exploitation;
·         National organizations such as the Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM) and the Crime Prevention Committee of the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police (CACP), given their leadership role in promoting community safety in general, and other national organizations mandated to address exploitation;
·         National and local level non-government organizations concerned with human trafficking and related exploitation.
For Canadian cities which have already developed multi-partnership and comprehensive crime prevention strategies, this guide will help to complement their work by providing a more in-depth focus on human trafficking and other related exploitation. For those cities which have not yet established such an approach but are concerned about trafficking and related forms of exploitation, the guide can be used as a stand-alone tool.
This guide provides a brief review of the international norms and standards governing human trafficking and other related types of exploitation, as well as crime prevention, and of existing Canadian legislation and initiatives. It outlines the stages involved in developing a sound audit or diagnosis of the problems, and identifies who should be involved. It gives examples of the range of preventive approaches which can be used, from local regulations and public awareness-raising campaigns, to targeted awareness-raising and interventions with at-risk populations. The guide also includes a glossary of key terms[6] and a list of international laws and instruments relevant to prevention of trafficking and other related forms of exploitation[7].
2. Trafficking in Persons and Related Exploitation – Global Context
The Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children, supplementing the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, was the first international legal instrument concerned with trafficking in persons. Canada ratified the Trafficking Protocol in 2002. The Protocol requires countries to take action on three fronts: prevention of trafficking, prosecution of offenders, and protection of victims of trafficking.
Article 9 of the Trafficking Protocol provides strong support for prevention and requires States Parties to:
·         establish comprehensive policies, programs and other measures to prevent trafficking;
·         endeavour to undertake measures such as research, information and mass media campaigns and social and economic initiatives to prevent trafficking;
·         include cooperation with non-governmental organizations and other elements of civil society in their (preventive) policies, programmes and other measures;
·         take/strengthen measures to alleviate the factors that make persons, especially women and children, vulnerable to trafficking, such as poverty, underdevelopment and lack of equal opportunity;
·         adopt or strengthen legislative or other measures (including educational, social or cultural) to discourage the demand that fosters all forms of exploitation, especially of women and children, that leads to trafficking.
Numerous other international norms and standards in relation to trafficking in persons, and to protecting vulnerable populations from other violence and exploitation,[8] provide strong mandates for prevention.
Drawing on international developments in crime prevention to accelerate prevention of human trafficking
The most comprehensive guidance on how to develop prevention strategies and what kinds of action are involved comes from the UN Guidelines on the Prevention of Crime (2002). These and earlier ones on urban crime prevention[9] are built upon years of practical experience and research. They emphasize the roles and responsibilities of governments at all levels to establish pro-active prevention strategies. Local services responsible, for example, for housing, health, job creation, recreation, education, and social services, can all have an impact upon the risks of people becoming victims or offenders. When these sectors work in partnership with the justice sector, using strategies which are based on good evidence and knowledge about crime problems and their causes, then crime and victimization can be effectively prevented.
The Guidelines set out eight basic principles for developing prevention strategies:
·         all governments should play a leadership role in developing effective and humane crime prevention strategies and in creating and maintaining institutional frameworks for their implementation and review;
·         crime prevention considerations should be integrated into all relevant social and economic policies and programs, including those addressing education, health, housing, urban planning, poverty, social marginalization and exclusion;
·         cooperation and partnerships should be an integral part of effective crime prevention, including partnerships that work across ministries and between levels, community organizations, non-governmental organizations, the private sector and private citizens;
·         prevention requires adequate resources to be sustained, and there should be clear accountability for funding, implementation, evaluation and achievement of planned results;
·         Prevention strategies, policies and programs should be based on a broad, multi-disciplinary foundation of knowledge;
·         Rule of law and human rights set out in instruments that countries are party to must be respected in all aspects of crime prevention;
·         National crime prevention diagnoses and strategies should, where appropriate, take account of the links between local crime and international organized crime;
·         Crime prevention strategies should pay due regard to the different needs of men and women, and consider the special needs of vulnerable members of society.
Four main approaches to crime prevention are outlined in the Guidelines, and these provide a wide range of options for developing action plans to prevent trafficking and related exploitation. The Guidelines also outline a systematic methodology or planning process for preventing crime of all kinds, which can be applied to the prevention of trafficking and related exploitation, especially at the local level. This entails a careful assessment of existing problems, their causes and resources using a safety audit. The audit is directed and undertaken by a core group of stakeholders, and aids the development of an action plan. The action plan itself will include: raising awareness about trafficking and exploitation, increasing regulation and inspection, and developing more targeted initiatives to protect those vulnerable to victimization and deter likely victimizers.
3. Trafficking in Persons – Canadian Context
Legal framework
The legal framework prohibits bringing persons into Canada by means such as deception, coercion, threat of force. The Criminal Code includes four specific indictable offences to address human trafficking, namely sections 279.01 (Trafficking in persons), 279.011 (Trafficking of a person under the age of eighteen years), 279.02 (Material benefit), and 279.03 (Withholding or destroying documents). The Code also defines exploitation for the purposes of trafficking: a person exploits another person if they cause the victim to provide labour or service for fear of their safety or the safety of someone known to them (s. 279.04). Additionally, many other Criminal Code offences can apply to human trafficking cases and can be used by police and Crown prosecutors depending on the facts and circumstances of a case. These include kidnapping, forcible confinement, uttering threats, extortion, assault, sexual assault, prostitution-related offences, and criminal organization offences.
Nature and scope of trafficking in Canada
Assessing the extent of human trafficking in Canada, as is the case internationally, is extremely difficult. Most cases are never reported to the police for a wide variety of reasons: the hidden nature of the offence; its links often to organized criminal activity; the reluctance of victims and witnesses to come forward and cooperate with police due to manipulation and threats from traffickers, fear, shame, language barriers, and/or mistrust of authorities; and the difficulty of identifying traffickers and victims in practice. In Canada, data on human trafficking is collected through a number of ways, including police reported incidents, convictions and the issuance of temporary resident permits for suspected trafficking victims.
Although the extent of human trafficking in Canada is difficult to determine, the following available statistics, as of April 2012, provide some context:
·         25 convictions (41 victims) under human trafficking specific offences in the Criminal Code enacted in 2005. This does not include the numerous other convictions for human trafficking related conduct under other criminal offences;
·         Approximately 56 cases currently before the courts, involving at least 85 accused and 136 victims;
·         At least 26 of these victims were under the age of 18 at the time of the alleged offence;
·         Over 90% of these cases involve domestic human trafficking; the remaining, less than 10% involved people being brought into Canada from another country;
·         3 charges have been laid under section 118 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA) which prohibits trafficking into Canada. While no convictions under that section have been registered, accused persons have been convicted under related provisions.
Victims
Women and girls represent the majority of the victims identified in this country as a whole to date. Victims may have been trafficked from other countries or within Canada itself. The latter include young women trafficked by pimps within a city and province, and inter-provincially as prostitutes, and young Aboriginal women trafficked from rural reserves to cities by gangs for sexual exploitation.[10]
In 2010, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) conducted a review of human trafficking cases reported to the police and intelligence agencies between 2005 and 2009.[11] They concluded that the majority of recent trafficking convictions had involved victims who were citizens or permanent residents of Canada, often groomed and coerced into the sex trade by gangs. Some victims were underage girls exploited through dance clubs and escort services. Non-Canadian victims came from Asia, notably Thailand, Cambodia, Malaysia and Vietnam, as well as countries in Eastern Europe and Africa.
Intelligence on human trafficking of men and women for forced labour has come to light through investigations in Alberta, Ontario and British Columbia and Manitoba. Labour-related investigations have involved foreign nationals from China, Ethiopia, Hungary, India, Mexico, the Philippines, Poland and Thailand. In 2012, a Hungarian family network was successfully prosecuted for trafficking men from Hungary for the purposes of forced labour in the construction industry.[12] Some fraudulent use of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program has also been evident, and the RCMP noted cases of foreign nationals smuggled into the country by employers, who were then controlled, threatened and forced to work as domestic helpers in poorly paid conditions.
Internationally, people living in disadvantaged situations with unemployment and poor job opportunities appear to be especially vulnerable to becoming tricked or persuaded that their lives will be better elsewhere. Similarly, in Canada one would expect that those groups most vulnerable to trafficking for sexual exploitation and forced labour include those who are socially or economically disadvantaged and marginalized:
·         Poor and/or illegal migrant women and men;
·         Seasonal migrant workers and domestic workers;
·         Young Aboriginal women and girls;
·         Young women and men coming out of the child protection system at 18 or from youth custody;
·         Other at risk girls, boys and young women and men, for example those who have dropped out of school, become substance users, have mental health problems, have run away from home, or are in conflict with the law.
The RCMP Human Trafficking National Coordinating Centre notes, however, that more and more cases of girls and young women from a variety of backgrounds are being recruited by pimps in settings such as schools who are employing the false romance tactic.
Who is trafficking – directly, enabling, using
Preventing trafficking in Canada requires consideration of who is directly involved in trafficking, including those who enable trafficking, providing tacit support to trafficking operations, and the users knowingly exploiting victims – those prepared to buy the services of the exploited, benefiting from cheap labour, failing to provide decent work conditions or pay, or seeking sexual services. All are offending.
The 2010 RCMP review found some limited intelligence in relation to organized criminal involvement in trafficking in cities with established Asian organized crime networks such as Vancouver. One of the challenges in proceeding with the cases involving Asian organized forced prostitution rings is obtaining the cooperation from the victims. In other cases, trafficking from other countries often involved groups of people, originally from the same countries, and loose criminal networks of illegitimate and legitimate contacts.[13]
Domestic trafficking appears to be more associated with pimps who may or may not have associations to street gangs. Recent reports suggest that some 300 street gangs have been identified across Canada. They tend to be associated with a city or area, and work at ‘the retail end’ of organized criminal activity on the street. They range from Aboriginal gangs in the Prairies to multi-ethnic urban gangs in Quebec and British Columbia.[14] A separate RCMP review of domestic trafficking noted that victims were often recruited or lured into being trafficking by relatives or close friends, including especially among girls by those they consider their boyfriends.[15]
As part of their ongoing threat assessment on human trafficking, the RCMP found evidence of organized crime groups which included families being involved in trafficking for forced labour. In their 2010 report, the RCMP identified a number of illegal activities by agencies recruiting from abroad. The latter are private sector agencies referred to as Third Party Agencies, who undertake recruitment, placement and ‘labour leasing’ of foreign nationals for domestic, agricultural and other work. The successful prosecution of an Ontario case of trafficking for the purpose of forced labour of Hungarian construction workers involved a large criminal organization comprised of two family networks.
Hungarian Family Trafficking Ring: As of June 1, 2012, seventeen members of an organized crime group involving two families in Hamilton, Ontario received sentences for participation in a criminal organization, conspiracy to commit trafficking in persons and/or fraud offences. The organization recruited men from their former village in Hungary promising steady work, good pay and better lives in Canada. On arrival, the men were forced to work long hours on construction sites operated by their traffickers for no pay, and claim welfare benefits which were then confiscated by their traffickers. They were under constant monitoring, threatened, living under poor conditions with some given only one meal a day.
In trafficking cases, there are likely to be individuals and organizations which tacitly support trafficking operations by turning a blind eye to suspicious activities, failing to check references properly, or regularly inspecting and enforcing existing regulations. Hotels and their staff, apartment and housing owners and employees, and employers in shops, restaurants, farms, factories or industrial sites may be unknowingly facilitating trafficking and the exploitation of victims. Some individuals could be unknowing users of trafficking services including those who seek sexual services through patrolling downtown city centres and poor neighbourhoods, frequenting massage parlours, engaging escort agencies, and accessing sexual services through the Internet. These are three of the most important areas in which local and provincial/ territorial authorities and services can institute preventive action.
There are various examples of pathways into trafficking and exploitation found in Canada. For instance:
·         A sexually abused child may go into care or become a run-away, and this background may increase his/her chance of being enticed and exploited by a ‘john’ or a pimp;
·         An aboriginal girl could be enticed from reserve to city due to lack of opportunity and become exploited by a pimp;
·         A young migrant working as a dancer, whose employer retains her passport and controls her life, is at increased risk of being further exploited by the employer and customers;
·         A migrant construction worker is lured under false promises by his prospective employer who then retains his passport and controls him by threats and force, thereby exploiting the worker.
The ‘supply’ of victims to human traffickers in Canada is clearly motivated by the profits to be made by the traffickers and the ease with which they are able to operate. It is also very clearly driven by continuing demand for the services of trafficked persons, and users’ general impunity from prosecution.
Nature and scope of related exploitation
‘….programmes designed to address only trafficking fall short in that they fail to recognize the broader context of the sexual exploitation in which the trafficking of Aboriginal girls takes place.’[16]
Unlike the situation for trafficking, data on vulnerability and on other types of exploitation does exist in Canada but it may underestimate the extent of the problem given the hidden nature of most exploitation. This includes information on the sexual exploitation and abuse of children, including prostitution, child pornography, and the luring of children over the Internet. The Uniform Crime Reporting Survey collects some information on persons accused of crimes, and for violent crimes such as intimidation, information is also collected on victims. These data show that most victims of police-reported intimidation on the Internet, about 7 in 10 victims, were women or young girls. In cases of child luring, about 9 in 10 victims were girls.[17]
Reporting of cases is affected by whether there is legislation against an activity, and public interest and concern about the problem. Child luring through the Internet, for example, became a specific offence in the Criminal Code in 2002, and the number of cases reported has increased yearly since that time.[18]
Canada-wide data can also be difficult to find if an issue is a provincial and territorial responsibility. For example, child protection is a provincial/territorial responsibility and legislation and age ranges for protection vary between provinces, so estimating the number of children and youth in state care across the country is not straightforward, and methods of counting and estimation vary. Estimates of the size of groups especially vulnerable to exploitation include:[19]
·         Almost 9,000 cases of family sexual assault were reported in selected police areas in 2001, 81% involving girls, with the majority of victims between 7 and 14 years of age;[20]
·         Some 67,000 children and youth were estimated to be in ‘out-of-home’ care in 2007;[21]
·         Some 65,000 youth were estimated to be homeless/ living in homeless shelters in 2004;[22]
·         464 cases of child luring through the Internet were reported between 2006 and 2007.[23]
The sexual exploitation of girls and boys, young women and young men is highly damaging for the victims, and makes them especially vulnerable to further exploitation, including through human trafficking. There are other risk factors that contribute to this vulnerability, ranging from broad social ones to community, family and individual ones. The ecological model assists in examining these risk factors.
World Health Organization – Ecological model for understanding violence
Image Description
This model examines factors at the individual, relationship, community and societal levels that influence behaviour and increase the risk of committing or being a victim of violence. This model demonstrates the inter-relationship between the levels so that factors in one level can be strengthened or modified by factors in another level. The following extracts from this Report capture the key factors in each level:
The first level identifies biological and personal history factors that influence how individuals behave and increase their likelihood of becoming a victim or perpetrator of violence. Examples of factors that can be measured or traced include demographic characteristics (age, education, income), psychological or personality disorders, substance abuse and a history of behaving aggressively or experiencing abuse.
The second level looks at close relationships such as those with family, friends, intimate partners and peers, and explores how these relationships increase the risk of being a victim or perpetrator of violence level…
The third level explores the community contexts in which social relationships occur such as schools, workplaces and neighborhoods, and seeks to identify the characteristics of these settings that increase the risk for violence. Risk at this level may be influenced by factors such as residential mobility…population density, high levels of unemployment, or the existence of a local drug trade.
The fourth level looks at the broad societal factors that help create a climate in which violence is encouraged or inhibited. These include the availability of weapons and social and cultural norms…(such as) those that entrench male dominance over women and children, ….Larger societal factors also include the health, economic, educational and social policies that help to maintain economic or social inequalities between groups in society.[25]
The World Report on Violence and Health[24] uses an ecological model for understanding the complex and multi-faceted nature of violence. This model examines factors at the individual, relationship, community and societal levels that influence behaviour and increase the risk of committing or being a victim of violence. This model demonstrates the inter-relationship between the levels so that factors in one level can be strengthened or modified by factors in another level. The following extracts from this Report capture the key factors in each level:
The first level identifies biological and personal history factors that influence how individuals behave and increase their likelihood of becoming a victim or perpetrator of violence. Examples of factors that can be measured or traced include demographic characteristics (age, education, income), psychological or personality disorders, substance abuse and a history of behaving aggressively or experiencing abuse.
The second level looks at close relationships such as those with family, friends, intimate partners and peers, and explores how these relationships increase the risk of being a victim or perpetrator of violence level…
The third level explores the community contexts in which social relationships occur such as schools, workplaces and neighborhoods, and seeks to identify the characteristics of these settings that increase the risk for violence. Risk at this level may be influenced by factors such as residential mobility…population density, high levels of unemployment, or the existence of a local drug trade.
The fourth level looks at the broad societal factors that help create a climate in which violence is encouraged or inhibited. These include the availability of weapons and social and cultural norms…(such as) those that entrench male dominance over women and children, ….Larger societal factors also include the health, economic, educational and social policies that help to maintain economic or social inequalities between groups in society.
Aboriginal peoples represent the population most vulnerable to exploitation in Canada. Aboriginal peoples have endured racism, discrimination and violence for centuries. Colonization and state policies including residential schools and high placement rates in the child welfare system, have eroded traditional Aboriginal culture and language, and are underlying factors for rates of violence and substance abuse in many Aboriginal families and communities.[26]
Recent studies of Aboriginal girls and women in Canada underline not only their overrepresentation in child welfare systems, but their sexual exploitation including through the visible sex trade and domestic trafficking.[27]
It was suggested that reframing some of the exploitative acts that are perpetrated against Aboriginal women as “trafficking” may serve to undermine the stereotypes that have long been attached to them such as “prostitute” and “criminal”… Overall, a shift is required away from interpreting legislation in the light of preconceived notions of what trafficking “victims” look like, and a move towards protecting vulnerable people in dire economic circumstances from having their labour exploited.[28] This reframing is being undertaken more broadly within law enforcement to encourage consideration of someone being a victim of trafficking, rather than assuming that a person is freely engaging in prostitution.
Canadian action and resources to prevent trafficking and other related exploitation
National Action
The Government of Canada launched its National Action Plan to Combat Human Trafficking in June 2012. A Human Trafficking Taskforce, led by Public Safety Canada and comprised of key departments, will replace the Interdepartmental Working Group on Trafficking in Persons and be responsible for overseeing the implementation of the National Action Plan commitments under the 4-Ps, coordinating the federal anti-human trafficking response, and reporting annually on progress to the public. The National Action Plan, in relation to prevention, recognizes the following:
·         the importance of developing holistic strategies that address the risk factors that can lead to human trafficking and related forms of exploitation, and that will assist in reducing victimization and associated harms;
·         the need for successful prevention strategies to be developed and implemented at all stages of the prevention continuum from awareness raising through to prevention of re-victimization;
·         a need to enhance awareness activities that are tailored to specific audiences;
·         a need to assist communities to identify people and places most at risk of human trafficking so that prevention and intervention can be better targeted.
The Government of Canada will increase its prevention and awareness efforts in several ways, including by:
·         Developing a new and enhanced web page that includes updates on the Government of Canada’s efforts, resources, awareness materials and events;
·         Aligning national education, information and awareness campaigns and developing campaigns tailored for specific audiences which include a “TruckSTOP” campaign to prevent human trafficking for the purpose of sexual exploitation, distribution of the RCMP “I’m Not for Sale” campaign including to large communities of First Nations, Inuit and Métis; a youth campaign; and distribution of awareness materials at Canadian Embassies and Consulates;
·         Enhancing understanding of exploitation of Aboriginal girls and boys, women and men, with a focus on prevention and providing culturally and historically informed training to enforcement officials on the circumstances that may contribute to human trafficking within Aboriginal communities;
·         Developing awareness products for temporary foreign workers, employers and third parties, and updating in foreign languages a brochure informing temporary foreign workers and international students who may work in Canada of their rights and providing important contact information;
·         Developing national and local diagnostic tools to assist with the identification of populations and places most at-risk of trafficking and other related forms of exploitation in Canada. In addition, these tools will identify the range of prevention practices that should be considered.
The Federal, Provincial and Territorial Working Groups on Status of Women, Justice and Public Safety, and on Crime Prevention touch on trafficking issues.
The Human Trafficking National Coordinating Centre (HTNCC), established by the RCMP in 2005, acts as a national focal point for all law enforcement in their efforts to combat human trafficking. It undertakes analysis, and conducts awareness-raising and training, among other activities. It works closely with federal, provincial and territorial agencies as well as internationally. Among other initiatives, the Centre has developed a training curriculum on human trafficking for front-line and other workers.
In 2011, Public Safety supported four roundtables to look at existing prevention action, and discuss what a national framework for human trafficking prevention might look like. Provincial roundtables took place in Vancouver and Winnipeg, with the national and international meetings in Montreal.[29] Key substantive findings emerging from these meetings are that a trafficking prevention strategy or action plan should be based on the principles and methodology of the United Nations Guidelines for the Prevention of Crime, and should:
·         Extend beyond the narrow legal definition of trafficking and address a range of behaviours associated with sexual and labour exploitation;
·         Be governed by international treaty obligations, norms and standards in relation to trafficking in persons, and to exploitation of specific vulnerable populations such as children, women and minorities;
·         Be concerned with domestic and international trafficking activities;
·         Focus on both the supply of victims and the demand for their services;
·         Build on existing structures as far as possible;
·         Develop a good evidence base and knowledge about effective practices.
Provincial and territorial initiatives
British Colombia’s Office to Combat Trafficking in Persons (OCTIP) was established in 2007. It works with the federal government, provincial ministries, law enforcement, academic organizations and community agencies to:
·         build services for trafficked persons, including shelter, health care, counselling and support services, legal consultation and interpretation services;
·         coordinate the development and implementation of awareness and training activities for front line workers, service providers, legal professionals and anyone who is likely to encounter trafficked persons;
·         partner with law enforcement to ensure that services for trafficking in persons are accessed as required;
·         maintain an updated website, listing research, resources, and community services available.[30]
In 2011, in partnership with Public Safety Canada and the Department of Justice, OCTIP launched an on-line self-guided training curriculum on human trafficking designed for service providers and practitioners. It includes modules on understanding what trafficking is, recognizing when it is taking place, knowing how to help victims, and where to refer them.
Manitoba is very active in relation to trafficking for purposes of sexual and labour exploitation. It passed the Worker Recruitment and Protection Act in 2009 to protect migrant workers from exploitation and trafficking. It has a number of provincial initiatives on human trafficking and sexual exploitation which bring together government and civil society organizations, including the Tracia’s Trust Provincial Task Force, an interdepartmental committee on trafficking, a Sexual Exploitation Unit and regional sexual exploitation teams, a Trafficking in Persons Response Team, and a First Nations Working Group on sexual exploitation and trafficking. This province is currently developing a Code of Conduct in partnership with the business sector on exploitation prevention.[31]
In Alberta, the Action Coalition on Human Trafficking (ACT Alberta) is a coalition of government agencies, NGO’s and other stakeholders including survivors of trafficking. It undertakes a number of actions from public awareness to training for service providers.[32]
A number of other provinces and territories have committees[33], working groups or designated personnel who are concerned with trafficking and exploitation issues and migrant workers. They provide some support services for trafficking victims or those at risk, and have conducted awareness-raising campaigns against trafficking. They are variously located in departments of social and family service, Aboriginal affairs, justice, public safety, labour or the police. Annex C provides further information on provincial and territorial initiatives.
Local government initiatives
A number of municipalities such as Montreal, Edmonton and Halifax have set up task forces or multidisciplinary teams which bring together representatives of local government, the police, social and family services, housing and educational sectors, for example, on issues including youth gangs, neighbourhood violence and trafficking. The organization Safedmonton, for example, set up a working group which reported on ‘Working together to Address Sexual Exploitation in Edmonton’ in 2007. The City of Montreal developed an Action Plan on street prostitution from 2004-7. These cities are also members of the Municipal Network on Crime Prevention which acts as a forum for sharing crime prevention knowledge and experience.[34]
The Municipal Network includes fourteen Canadian cities which exchange experience about crime prevention problems, initiatives and programmes. The network was established and is coordinated by the Institute for the Prevention of Crime (IPC) at the University of Ottawa. IPC has published a number of reports on their work, including a tool Making Cities Safer: Action Briefs for Municipal Stakeholders (2009), which draws on the UN Guidelines on the Prevention of Crime.[35]
Multi-agency partnerships between governments, the police and national, provincial and local non-government organizations are crucial to advance effective prevention. They include organizations such as PACT Ottawa, and the Salvation Army which focus on trafficking and related exploitation. Their work often includes information gathering and developing support services for trafficking victims. Apart from training curricula, both governments and non-government organizations have developed tools and guides on human trafficking to raise awareness or provide information to potential or actual victims. For example, the People’s Law School in Vancouver published a brief guide to Human Trafficking in Canada in 2010. Annex C provides further information on some of these organizations and resources.
Thus while federal and provincial or territorial governments have a major role to play in developing and supporting prevention action, it is local governments which are most likely to be faced with the consequences of trafficking and exploitation, and where users are active. Attention to local regulations, inspections, and service provision, alerting the business and private sector, local citizens groups, and the population to the possibilities of trafficking activity, increasing public awareness, and undertaking training of key personnel are all important activities which local authorities can undertake.
Part II: Conducting a Sound Audit and Developing an Action Plan
This section focuses on how to undertake a local diagnosis or audit[36] and develop proposals for a prevention action plan at the local level. It draws in part on the Guidance on Local Safety Audits: A Compendium on International Practice.[37] More detailed explanation of the stages of the process and technical information on how to undertake surveys and interviews etc. can be found in that publication.
The purpose of the local safety audit is:
To build as comprehensive a picture as possible of the current problems of crime and insecurity in a municipality or neighbourhood – in this case trafficking and other exploitation – and the causes of those problems, including how these vary across gender and diversity.
To develop a local action plan that responds to those problems and their causes. This will include deciding on the priorities, building on policies and services already in place and creating new partnerships and initiatives.
By collecting qualitative and quantitative information which is gender and diversity disaggregated from a wide range of sources such as community organizations, women’s groups, housing and recreation departments, and social, family and health services, rather than relying just on police reported data or intelligence, a comprehensive picture will emerge of who is involved, where the problems are taking place, and what facilitates them.
Some of the information needed for the safety audit may already exist in routine municipal and police reports and data collected by local services or organizations. In other cases it may be necessary to undertake specific surveys or reviews. The views and experiences of community and business organizations, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) working in the field, and service providers from municipal, provincial and federal governments, will be essential to help build a full picture, as well as people who have themselves been involved in trafficking and exploitation.
The Guidance on Local Safety Audits identifies four stages in the process of conducting a safety audit which are shown in the diagram below. These are preceded by a mobilization or preparatory stage which involves bringing together the core team responsible for conducting the audit and identifying the key stakeholders who need to be consulted and involved.
The Stages of Conducting a Local Safety Audit
Preparatory
Stage 1
Stage 2
Stage 3
Stage 4
Bringing together key players
The ‘wide and shallow’ analysis
‘Narrow and deep’ investigation
Developing the Action Plan – Identifying priorities and opportunities
Developing the Action Plan – Consulting and Communicating
Create audit team and determine communities to be engaged
Initial appraisal of problems and contributory factors using readily accessible information, where possible
Researching those issues requiring further attention to gain a better understanding
Determining which issues the strategy should focus on as well as strengths and assets on which to build
Consulting stakeholders, preparing the audit report and disseminating its findings
Gender and diversity considerations are a cross-cutting lens and need to be incorporated at every stage
4. Preparatory stage – mobilizing energy and involvement
Who needs to be involved – core team or steering group
The final action plan will form part of the city or municipality’s crime prevention policy – so it needs input and buy-in from key players from the start to ensure that it is implemented and followed through. It needs to have the authority and resources to undertake its work. The core team or steering group needs to include senior figures such as the mayor, the chief executive of the local government and the chief of police or senior representatives of those offices. Other core team members should include representatives from relevant government, non-governmental, community based and private sector organizations – women’s organizations, child protection, youth and family services, Aboriginal services, health, education, labour and housing – in other words those services working directly with potential victims of trafficking and related exploitation. In some cases it may be important to include provincial or territorial representatives where services are not administered by the local government.
Who needs to be involved – key stakeholders forum
The core team will need to work actively with a range of other stakeholders, and together they form the stakeholders’ roundtable or forum on trafficking and related exploitation. They may include representatives of immigrant groups and other minorities, local labour organizations, health services, immigration services, hotel associations, job-placement centres, chambers of commerce, police, other local, provincial or national organizations providing services to victims or potential victims of trafficking, as well as the media. It is also very useful to include local researchers or academics with expertise in the area of trafficking and exploitation where possible.
Working in a participatory way
Cities are made up of a rainbow of different groups and populations. The stakeholder forum cannot include representatives of all of them. So it is very important for the safety audit to enable the many sectors in the city with different backgrounds, views and experiences to have an active role and voice.
Who will undertake the diagnostic and how long will it take
Initial decisions will need to be agreed by the core team in terms of who will undertake the day-to-day work, and what the time scale will be. There should be a member of the team tasked with overseeing the details. The time to conduct the diagnostic and develop the action plan will depend in part on the size of the city and its capacity for prevention, and could take 6 to 12 months. It should be noted, however, that action can be taken before then. If a problem is clearly identified early on, it may be agreed to take action and gain a ‘quick win’ which helps to build confidence.
It is worth noting that conducting a good safety audit requires a range of technical skills which are valuable for pulling together existing information and data, collecting and analysing additional data, and presenting clear and well informed reports. The Guidance on Local Safety Audits lists some of these skills.[38]
·         Research design – formulation of objectives, selection of methods, specification of outputs;
·         Project management – scheduling of work, allocation of resources, risk management and quality assurance;
·         Stakeholder analysis – identification of all stakeholders, assessment of their stake and determining how they should be involved;
·         Community engagement – use of activities that encourage broad participation, especially to facilitate the engagement of women, youth and ‘hard-to-reach’ groups;
·         Consultative techniques – interviews, meetings and focus groups to elicit information from service providers and community interests;
·         Victimization surveys – questionnaire design, population sampling, database construction and interrogation;
·         Gender-Based Analysis – identification of gender and diversity considerations throughout the audit;[39]
·         Statistical analysis – identifying, collecting and analysing relevant data held by agencies, possibly using geographical information systems; and
·         Communication – report writing, giving presentations and other activities to keep stakeholders involved and to get feedback from research findings.
Data collection, trust and confidentiality
The first two stages of the audit process involve collecting gender disaggregated and diversity–disaggregated qualitative and quantitative data. A variety of different sources and methods can be used:
Documents
Reports and studies – government, NGO, academic, media
Statistics
Local, provincial/territorial, national, public agencies, police, civil society, business
Interviews
Key informants and stakeholders, organizations providing services
Surveys
Opinion polls, household or street surveys, surveys of victims, commercial establishments, local neighbourhoods, schools
Consultations
Focus groups and meetings with local communities, associations, the media, etc.
Outreach
Meetings with individuals or groups in their own settings
Observation
Visiting specific locations to observe activities, talk with locals, undertake exploratory walks
5. Stage 1: Broad city profile
The first stage of a local audit involves building a broad picture of the city and its catchment area, and the extent of social and economic problems, and trafficking and related exploitation. Information needs to be collected and pooled from readily available sources. It should be disaggregated as far as possible – broken down in terms of age, gender and ethno-cultural background, as well as the intersection of these – and in terms of its distribution across city sectors or neighbourhoods. In some cities there may be existing geo-coded information which maps the location of demographic, economic and social information. The chart below indicates the main types of information to be collected.
Basic information on the city and catchment area
·         Population (city and catchment area)
·         Age and Gender structure including intersectional analysis
·         Ethno-cultural diversity – countries of origin, language and length of time in city
·         Immigration and Migration (within Canada and from outside)
Economic and social issues
·         Main economic activities, industries (and migrant or temporary workers)
·         Socio-economic profile of the population
·         Unemployment levels
·         Poor housing and infrastructure
·         Education levels – school drop-out
·         Health problems
·         Family violence and child abuse
·         Drug and alcohol problems
·         Children in/exiting the child protection system
·         Homelessness
Crime, disorder and victimization
·         Reported crime rates and types
·         Neighbourhoods with high levels of crime and victimization
·         Main places/locations of drug and sex trade and youth gang activity
·         Perceptions of risk, vulnerability, police and other services
Trafficking and exploitation
·         What is known about the nature and scope of trafficking for purposes of sexual exploitation in your city?
·         What is the profile of known victims of trafficking (gender, age, ethnicity, origin, and nature of their exploitation)?
·         What is known about the method of ‘recruitment’ of victims in relation to trafficking for sexual exploitation? How do these methods differ for different populations?
·         How many local cases of actual or suspected human trafficking have there been in recent years?
·         Who are the traffickers (gender, age, ethnicity, origin, links to youth gangs, pimping or organized crime)?
·         Where in the city and catchment area are trafficking and exploitation or recruitment most likely to be occurring?
·         Transport hubs
·         International border areas close to city
·         Commerce/industries (strip bars, beauty/ massage/ escort services, malls, food processing, restaurants, farms, mining and lumber industries)
·         Private homes
·         Remote and rural areas
·         Schools, group homes
·         Hotels
·         Entertainment or tourist districts
·         What general information is there about Internet luring locally?
Assessing existing policies and services
·         Are there any specific policies or initiatives relating to trafficking or related exploitation in the city or province/territory (e.g., provincial legislation; local task force on sexual exploitation; public awareness campaigns about trafficking; hotlines to report incidents or get help; codes of conduct for local businesses; regulations and inspections affecting the local hotel, bars, industry and agricultural sectors)?
·         What public and private organizations provide services to those at risk of trafficking and exploitation, or to the victims (e.g., legal services, information and advice; support and shelter; health services; services for at risk youth)?
·         Have law enforcement agencies and service providers, including healthcare workers and workplace safety inspectors, received any training in identifying and supporting trafficked victims (e.g., general awareness or more in-depth training)?
·         What policies or practices are barriers to preventing trafficking and related exploitation?
The main sources of information are government and civil society:
Government
·         Municipal records and reports
·         Local police reported crime and intelligence, provincial police reports, Statistics Canada Uniform Crime Reports (other law enforcement agencies, border control, customs and immigration, CISC)
·         Criminal justice agencies (victims services, corrections, courts)
·         Health services, clinics, hospitals especially those providing services to sex workers and hospital emergency departments
·         Family welfare and child protection services
·         Aboriginal services
·         Labour departments and inspectorates
·         General Household Survey, Statistics Canada on victimization rates and fear of crime
Civil society sources
·         Chamber of Commerce, business sector
·         Aboriginal organizations
·         Community groups representing national, ethnic or cultural groups, including immigrant women’s groups
·         Organizations providing legal services, support to legal and illegal immigrants, asylum seekers or sex workers
·         Women’s advocacy groups, victim services and victim/witness assistance programmes, women’s shelters, sexual assault crisis centres etc.
·         Faith-based and other NGO’s providing support/services relating to exploitation
·         Academic reports and studies
·         Organized labour groups such as unions and local labour councils
6. Stage 2: In-depth research on trafficking and related exploitation
Much of the activity associated with trafficking and related forms of exploitation – gang activity, pimping, child exploitation – is hidden and unreported. The second stage of the safety audit process, therefore, involves collecting in-depth information on the groups most at risk of sexual exploitation and those who are trafficking in the local area, the views of communities and key stakeholders, and the strengths and gaps in existing policies and services.
A variety of research methods can be used to gain more detailed information:
·         undertaking specific local surveys of residents, businesses, commercial areas and service providers on their experiences and views;
·         conducting more detailed interviews with key informants on causal factors, gaps in policies and services;
·         holding consultations with community groups, women’s organizations, immigrant organizations;
·         doing outreach work with experiential women and others in the sex industry;
·         observing activities and locations.
It may be useful to set up working groups to investigate different topics, or commission local organizations or researchers to undertake surveys and interviews, but always in close association with the Project Coordinator and Core Team. The Guidance on Local Safety Audits provides some useful technical information on how to conduct surveys, undertake consultations and gather qualitative information.[40] More detailed gender-disaggregated information should also be sought at this stage on the exploiters, the exploited and on conditions of work, hours, salaries etc.
Views of communities and key stakeholders
Surveys and interviews should also be used to find out the views, experience and knowledge of local communities or sectors affected by trafficking. How much are the public in those communities aware of trafficking and related forms of exploitation in the city? How much are industries and the business and commercial sector aware of the problems, and the important prevention role they can play? What are the views of children coming out of care? What are the views of those already involved in trafficking and exploitation?
Strengths and gaps in existing policies and services
Similarly, interviews and surveys can help to identify gaps and strengths in existing services and policies. What solutions do local stakeholders suggest? What do local NGO’s think about current policies? What else needs to be put in place? What do those already involved in trafficking think would help prevent others from becoming exploited or trafficked? What training needs do different sectors have? What barriers exist in policies and programs to prevent exploitation or remove individuals from exploitative situations?
It is important to try to balance the views of service providers with those of service users, those in need of services, as well as independent experts or researchers.
7. Stage 3: Identifying priorities, opportunities and prevention strategies
Deciding on priorities
Having undertaken more detailed research and analysis, the safety audit team will be in a better position to draw conclusions about what can be done to target the problems identified, what the priorities are, and what additional policies and interventions are needed. This may not be easy, since stakeholders may disagree about which are the most serious problems, and which should be tackled first.
It is important to agree on a time scale for action – with short term, medium and longer term plans. This allows for some quick results or ‘quick wins’ which will demonstrate progress. In order to decide on priorities it helps to establish some explicit criteria which the core team and stakeholder forum can agree on, such as:
·         What are the main concerns of local communities?
·         Which problems would contribute most to wider policy priorities?
·         What kinds of resources are available (financial, technical, human)?
·         Which risk factors need to be addressed most urgently?
·         Which population groups are most vulnerable and at greatest risk?
·         Which neighbourhoods and commercial areas are most affected by trafficking and exploitation?
·         Which types of trafficking/exploitation have the greatest volume and incidence rate?
·         Which types of trafficking/exploitation show the highest rate of increase?
·         Are there any short-term actions which can be taken?
Opportunities
It is important to consider all the assets, strengths and opportunities which the safety audit process has uncovered so far. This will help in the development and implementation of the final action plan itself. These may include:
·         Strong communities or interest groups that want – and have the capacity – to play a significant role in bringing about change;
·         Successful projects and programmes run by NGO’s and other civil society organizations, or government services such as police and crime prevention which could be extended to deliver more preventive services;
·         Agencies which recognise the links between what they do and the prevention of trafficking and exploitation, and are keen to make a contribution;
·         Government policies and legislation that can be used to tackle trafficking and exploitation problems;
·         Funding programmes that offer resources for activities focussed on these priorities;
·         Existing tools that could be utilized for various preventative initiatives.
Developing a prevention action plan
The research and analysis will have identified gaps in services and options for new policies to be identified. Additional research on good practice examples in Canada and other countries may be valuable at this stage.
The Core Team and Stakeholder Forum should discuss what a comprehensive prevention strategy on trafficking and exploitation should look like. The chart below outlines the prevention approaches which could be used including legislation, establishment of a permanent forum, general and targeted awareness-raising and specific interventions. Please see Annex C for Canadian examples.
Continuum of prevention options for trafficking and related exploitation

Practice
Sexual Exploitation
Labour Exploitation
Legislation
Provincial legislation
Inspection of work places
Inspection of work places and conditions including private employers
Governance
Establish permanent local task force or forum; mechanisms to coordinate information and action


Local regulation and enforcement
Regulation of bars, massage, body rub, beauty salons etc. Regular inspection and enforcement
Regulation of work place and employment situations; inspection and enforcement
Local/provincial/territorial protocols
E.g. Protocols between police/municipality and social services; with business sector; NGO’s etc.
Protocols between municipality and industrial work sites, factories etc.
Situational Prevention
Patrolling and surveillance of hot spots


General Awareness Raising
Public education and awareness raising
Local media, posters, leaflets
Local media, posters, leaflets
User awareness campaigns
Who are the users, what are the impacts of demand
Who are the users, what are the impacts of demand
Hotlines and public numbers for reporting, advice and help

Leaflets and information where migrant and temporary workers meet, regularly go
Media awareness raising
Information sessions with provincial and local media
Information sessions with provincial and local media
Internet awareness
With parents, schools, youth groups

Targeted Awareness Raising
Education and awareness raising
Schools, youth clubs, Aboriginal families/communities, foster parent groups
Industry staff and workers; hotel industry; agricultural associations
Community and Neighbourhood Prevention
Local campaigns
Inclusive projects which support at risk populations, invite discussions with business sector, alert residents to how they can help
Projects to support migrant workers, local agricultural workers
Projects to provide support and services
Drop-in centres, outreach work, education and skills training; supported housing

Interventions
Interventions with high risk groups, reintegration for post care or custody groups
Children in care, coming out of care;
Street children; youth gangs; women in disadvantaged circumstances (drug, alcohol use, homeless, working in sex trade etc.)
Work with third party agencies to provide information about rights and conditions
Reaching a consensus among all the members of the Core Team and Stakeholder Forum on the priorities and time scale and possible interventions is very important since this will affect how the audit results are communicated and implemented in the future.
Preparing the safety audit report
Work on the preparation of the report of the safety audit and its findings and recommendations should be completed at this stage. The final written report needs to be based on an analysis of all the gender-disaggregated qualitative and quantitative data collected, and recommendations about programmes and interventions. It will be the result of detailed discussion by the core team and stakeholder forum. It needs to outline their vision and objectives, and place the issues of trafficking and exploitation in the city in the context of provincial/territorial and national trends as far as possible. It should set out the priorities and possibilities for developing a workable prevention action plan. A summary of the key findings will also be needed, and possibly translated into relevant languages. The table below illustrates the main areas of information which the audit report should aim to cover. [41]
Introduction
Vision and objectives
Core Steering Group and Stakeholder Forum
Research methods and team
Consultations on the report, including key questions
Summary of Key Findings
Main problems and concerns
Current preventive activity, including services and projects
Available resources, strengths and capacities
Description of the city
Socio-economic profile of the population
Physical and economic environment
Future development: significant trends
Profile of trafficking and related exploitation in the city
Findings of data gathering and analysis:
·         nature, scale, trends and distribution of trafficking and exploitation in the city
·         risk/causal factors identified
·         impacts, including social consequences
·         victim/target and offender profiles
·         users
·         gender and diversity profiles for all of the above
Current Responses
Relevant legislation and institutions
Policies and services addressing risk factors
Prevention activities
What is and isn’t working well
Lessons learned and opportunities for development
Recommendations
Emerging priorities based on the evidence gathered
Key partners for future action
Resources and capacities
Future Action
Next steps: action planning
Timeframes
Leadership – who is responsible for what?
8. Stage 4: Consulting and communicating
The final stage of the safety audit process involves sharing and disseminating the report widely to get feedback from stakeholders and the public, including meetings with elected representatives, neighbourhood associations, youth groups, women’s organizations, Aboriginal organizations, ethno-cultural and immigrant associations, social service providers, the Chamber of Commerce and hotel associations. A media strategy is required when the report is made public, and a gender-based analysis of the strategy will help determine how best to reach diverse stakeholders. The table below, taken from the Guidance on Safety Audits,[42] illustrates the different levels of community engagement which are possible.
Techniques for engaging communities in audit planning and implementation
Stage
Informing
Consulting
Involving
Collaborating
Empowering
Planning
Community informed by newsletters and media of audit plan
Civil society representatives submit inputs or comment on plans
Communities involved in the planning process
Community representatives are members of the planning group
Community representatives chair the Steering Group and agree on plan
Stage 1:Wide and Shallow
Community informed by newsletters and media coverage of key statistics
Interviews with citywide civil society, written submissions, surveys
Interaction with communities to discuss issues and explore viewpoints
Communities actively involved in audit team
Community representatives decide which issues to study in Stage 3
Stage 2:Narrow and Deep
Community informed by newsletters, media coverage of detailed studies
Meetings with community groups, consultations, surveys
Joint workshops to exchange ideas and discuss conclusions
Communities leading audit work in certain areas
Communities take lead in assessing significance of data collected
Stage 3: Priorities and Opportunities
Community informed by newsletters, media coverage of emerging results
Comments on the analysed data and emerging priorities
Communities involved in prioritisation and assessing assets
Communities strongly influence selection of priorities
Communities decide priorities
Stage 4: Consulting and Communicating
Distribution of audit report with media coverage
Invited community feedback on audit report
Discussion of draft report before publication
Audit report written collaboratively and circulated for comment
Community representatives decide content of final report
Gender and diversity are cross-cutting lenses to be incorporated at every stage
Part III: Specific populations at risk
9. Populations at risk of being trafficked and other related exploitation
Individual
Family
School
Community
·         Growing up in care
·         Hyperactivity
·         Impulsivity
·         Learning difficulties
·         Mental Illness
·         Insecurity
·         Poor social skills
·         Low self esteem
·         Drug use
·         Anti-social friends
·         Friends who offend
·         Violence/abuse
·         Lack of affection
·         Poor supervision
·         Inconsistent discipline
·         Family breakdown
·         Mental illness
·         Parental conflict
·         Poverty
·         Substance abuse
·         Criminality
·         Unemployment
·         Truancy
·         Suspension/expulsion
·         School failure
·         Aggressive behaviour
·         Bullying
·         Lack of commitment
·         Poor relationships
·         Special needs
·         Unsupportive parents
·         Under achievement
·         Peer rejection
·         Disadvantage
·         High crime rate
·         Racial tension
·         Unemployment
·         Disorganization
·         Neglect
·         Availability of drugs
·         High turnover
·         Lack of attachment
·         Poor living conditions
·         Lack of services
The populations at greatest risk of trafficking and related forms of exploitation in Canada are those who are exposed to a number of overlapping risk factors in their lives at the individual, family, school, community and societal levels. They are likely to be among the poorest and more disadvantaged groups. Children, adolescent girls and women tend to be most at risk of sexual trafficking and exploitation, while both men and women are at risk of labour exploitation. There are strong links between being exposed to risk factors in childhood and adolescence and their continuing influence on adult life. The table below provides a more detailed list of some of the risk factors affecting girls and boys and young women and young men, noting that they are often affected in different ways.[43]
9.1 Aboriginal women and girls
In 2010, the Native Women’s Association of Canada (NWAC) reported that to date 582 Aboriginal women and girls had been murdered or are missing. This number continues to increase every year.[44]
Aboriginal peoples represent one of the most vulnerable populations in Canada. Given the systemic conditions of disadvantage and poverty in which many rural and remote Aboriginal communities live, their exposure to risk factors is often much greater than among non-Aboriginal populations, and thus their risk of exploitation much higher. The Native Women’s Association of Canada have argued that violence, substance abuse and sexual exploitation have become normalized within some Aboriginal communities and that there is little discussion on the topic.[45]
The 2007 Report of the Standing Committee on the Status of Women noted that Aboriginal girls and women are at greatest risk of becoming victims of trafficking and exploitation in Canada. Some 40% of them live in poverty, more than half of those over the age of 15 are unemployed, and more than half of Aboriginal single-parent households require core housing.[46]
‘….programmes designed to address only trafficking fall short in that they fail to recognize the broader context of the sexual exploitation in which the trafficking of Aboriginal girls takes place.’[47]
While this toolkit is mainly concerned with assessing problems in relation to human trafficking in urban centres, many Aboriginal women and girls leave reserves for the city, and young Aboriginal men become involved in gangs, so trafficking prevention initiatives need to target the risk factors affecting Aboriginal communities on reserves as well as urban centres. Aboriginal girls and women are likely to be over-represented among each of the at-risk groups discussed below. In the western provinces, anecdotal reports indicated that domestic trafficking and sexual exploitation predominantly affect Aboriginal women and girls.
9.2 Children and youth at risk – trafficking and other related sexual exploitation
Risks of sexual exploitation may be related to family members or friends, when they are in the child welfare system, or leaving care, when they run away from home and live on the street, when they become involved in youth gangs, or are in conflict with the law. These youth frequently face several of these risk factors, making them vulnerable to grooming, often by “boyfriends” which begins with promises of affection and support and may lead to forced prostitution. In their report on the sexual exploitation of children in Canada, the Senate Standing Committee on Human Rights references the lack of social and community support, addiction to drugs or alcohol, mental illness, disability and poor health – all factors exacerbating the risk for certain sub-populations of children and youth.[48] Girls and young women especially are at risk of luring through the Internet for sexual exploitation purposes. Further, the report argues that such exploitation is deeply rooted in many Canadian homes.[49] The report points out that while the age of consent for sexual activity in Canada is 16, “… the age of consent is 18 years of age where the sexual activity exploits the young person – when it involves prostitution, pornography or occurs in a relationship of authority, trust or dependency.”[50]
Commercial sexual exploitation of children is prohibited under the Palermo Trafficking Protocol. Canada is also responsible to protect children from harm and to advance their rights under the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC),[51] as well as under other Canadian federal and some provincial legislation.
The Manitoba Sexual Exploitation Strategy – Tracia’s Trust – defines child sexual exploitation as: the act of coercing, luring or engaging a child, under the age of 18, into a sexual act, and involvement in the sex trade or pornography, with or without the child’s consent, in exchange for money, drugs, shelter, food, protection or other necessities.
While the majority of those who end up in the sex trade in Canada are girls, boys are also at risk. The Senate Report notes that boys under the age of 14 are at risk of sexual exploitation by family members. Further, a series of studies of young male prostitutes in Canada’s western provinces indicated that some 88% of them had run away from home before becoming involved in the sex trade, 55% were in care, and 75% had been sexually exploited before their entry into the sex trade.[52]
Children and youth – violence in the family
A recent Statistics Canada study on family violence, based on police-reported data for 2009, indicates that:[53]
·         Children and youth under the age of 18 were most likely to be sexually victimized or physically assaulted by someone they knew (85% of incidents).
·         Nearly 55,000 children and youth were reported to be victims of sexual or physical assault in 2009, about 3 in 10 of which were perpetrated by a family member.
·         Six in ten children and youth victims of family violence were assaulted by their parents. The youngest child victims (under the age of three) were most vulnerable to violence by a parent.
·         The rate of reported family-related sexual offences was more than four times higher for girls than for boys, although the rate of physical assault was similar for girls and boys.
Even if they are not victims themselves, children growing up in homes where there is physical violence are known to be affected by witnessing it. They may accept it as normal, or learn to pattern their own behaviour on violence. The General Social Survey on Victimisation has estimated that children in an estimated 461,000 households heard or saw one parent assaulting the other in 1999.[54] Apart from the links between sexual and physical violence and subsequent exploitation, family members may also be involved in encouraging exploitation. Some Aboriginal girls may be forced into prostitution by relatives including parents, siblings, aunts and uncles, especially if a family member is involved in a gang.[55]
Questions to consider for your city/catchment area
Key sources/contacts
Children and youth at risk – violence in the family
·         How many children and youth are ‘at risk’ because of their home situation?
·         Are there effective systems for identifying boys and girls and young men and women at risk?
·         What are the home circumstances that put them ‘at risk’?
·         Which neighbourhoods have disproportionate numbers of girls and boys, young women and young men ‘at risk’?
·         Are the problems associated with specific demographic groups?
·         Which services and programmes are addressing the problems?
·         Are there any specific services which address risk of sexual exploitation for these children?
·         What additional supports or services are required?
·         Is there good multi-agency co-operation on this issue?
·         What are the priorities for further action?
·         Local and provincial child and family departments
·         Local children’s hospitals/health clinics
·         Local and provincial police data
·         Children’s Aid Societies
·         Statistics Canada
Children and youth growing up in care and leaving care
Estimates of the numbers of children in ‘out of home’ care (child protection, group homes or foster care) across Canada vary, because of differences in child welfare legislation and systems between provinces and territories. Some 65,000 cases were reported in 2007. More recent estimates by the Child Welfare League of Canada suggest 76,000 to 85,000 children are in foster care across the country.[56] Rates of care appear to be increasing across Canada, and it has been suggested that the number of families willing to foster children has been declining.[57]
The primary reasons why children and youth are taken into care are physical or sexual abuse, neglect, emotional maltreatment, and exposure to intimate partner violence. This means that children who come under the care of child welfare systems have already been exposed to a number of risk factors.
The First Nations Child and Family Caring Society (FNCFCS, 2005) estimates that 30–40% of children in care are Aboriginal. In some provinces Aboriginal children comprise 70% to 85% of children in care.[58]
For Aboriginal children, rates are much higher, with 1 in 10 compared with 1 in 200 non-Aboriginal children likely to be in care at some point in their lives. As the Native Women’s Association of Canada (NWAC) has argued, violence within Aboriginal families has become both intergenerational and normalized. Nevertheless, a main reason that Aboriginal children come to the attention of child welfare services is often for neglect, not violence.
Once in care, a number of children who experience difficulties in foster or group homes may develop risky or deviant behaviour including the use of alcohol and drugs and minor offending, leading to entry into the criminal justice system, or becoming ‘chronic runaways’.[59] A major concern is what happens to children when they leave care. They will be at even greater risk of being victimized or becoming an offender upon exiting care if there are no family and community supports in place, or they have no viable employment or job skills. In Ontario some 8,300 children are in foster care, and the problems confronting youth leaving care were the topic of public hearings with the Advocate for Children and Youth in 2012.[60] Again, the age of protection for children and youth in care varies across the provinces and territories.
In Canada the age of majority for all the Provinces and Territories is either 18 or 19 years of age. However for those in care, the age of protection ranges from 16 and under to 19 and under. Extensions can also be made for young people into their 20s.
Research on young people leaving care indicates that, compared to their peers, they are more likely to:[61]
·         Leave school before completing their secondary education;
·         Become a parent at a young age;
·         Be dependent on social assistance;
·         Be unemployed or underemployed;
·         Be incarcerated/involved with the criminal justice system;
·         Experience homelessness;
·         Have mental health problems;
·         Be at higher risk for substance abuse problems.
Youth leaving care, therefore, face many considerable challenges. “They bear the scars of physical and emotional trauma, yet are expected to function independently, usually with little social or financial support, once they reach the age of 18.”[62]
Questions to consider for your city/catchment area
Key sources/contacts
Children and youth growing up in care and leaving care
·         How many young people are growing up in care? What are the gender and diversity profiles?
·         How many leave care each year, and at what age?
·         What is their demographic profile?
·         What is the level of education and job skills for youth leaving care?
·         How many youth in care experienced previous victimization?
·         How many youth in care are believed to be involved in sexually exploitative activity?
·         What specific supports are provided to prevent future exploitation?
·         How many youth exiting care could be at high risk of being sexually exploited?
·         What are the main risk factors and concerns confronting youth leaving care?
·         What services support youth leaving care?
·         What other service initiatives are required?
·         What are the priorities for further action?
·         Provincial/Territorial Ministry responsible for Child Welfare/Protection
·         Children’s Aid Society
·         National Youth in Care Network
·         Provincial Advocate for Children and Youth

Street/homeless children and youth
Thousands of children run away from parental or foster homes each year in Canada and end up living on the street. Police departments suggest that 90% of runaway children return home within 60 days of leaving, but the others never go back. Those who have run away from, or in some cases been forced out of their homes, account for only a portion of the homeless youth population. The latter also includes young people living in shelters for the homeless with a mother or both parents. An estimated 65,000 youth were homeless or living in homeless shelters in 2004.[63] Street or homeless youth range in age from around 12 to 24 years of age. In a three-city (St. John’s, Calgary, and Toronto) snapshot study of homeless youth, 68% came from care situations, 62% had dropped out of school, and 73% were unemployed.[64] Over half reported drug and alcohol abuse, often as a way to cope with living on the street, and a quarter reported previous sexual, physical or emotional abuse. Most of these homeless youth found support in the street culture among them. Given their lifestyle and drug involvement, homeless youth are also vulnerable to health problems including HIV/AIDS.
A Public Health Agency of Canada study, Street Youth in Canada, reports that:
Several studies have noted that street youth use various survival strategies such as staying with friends, trading sex or prostitution, and committing offences when living on the streets. The longer they live on the street, the more likely they are to use these strategies. It has been estimated that between 12% and 32% of Canadian street youth are involved in prostitution…Limited education, a lack of marketable job skills and the generalized emotional and cognitive instability associated with homelessness itself contribute to these youths’ dependency on the ‘street economy” (e.g. sex trade, panhandling, drug running) as their primary source of income to meet their basic needs for food, clothing and shelter.[65]
The key triggers for young people leaving home would appear to be:[66]
·         Family-related factors (ranging from poverty to abuse);
·         System-related factors (including children in justice and mental health institutions, in care, or not receiving any form of support);
·         Illiteracy, leaving school early;
·         Lack of access to basic services.
Questions to consider for your city/catchment area
Key sources/contacts
Street/Homeless Children
·         What is the population of street children and youth? What are the gender and diversity profiles of homeless boys and girls?
·         What is their demographic profile?
·         Where do they sleep and work? Differences by gender, age?
·         Are the numbers increasing?
·         Why are they ‘on the street’ and how do they survive?
·         What is their involvement in sexual exploitation – as victims or perpetrators?
·         Which activities bring them into conflict with the law?
·         Is there a multi-sector policy on street children?
·         Which services or organizations are engaged with them?
·         How well are interventions working, what else is needed to prevent sexual exploitation?
·         What are the priorities for further action?
·         Local police data
·         Community/NGO’s
·         Outreach workers
·         Child and Family Services
·         Youth in Care Network
Children and youth involved in gangs
Youth or street gangs in Canada are usually distinguished from organized criminal groups. They can be classified into three types: self-identified groups, those recognized by others as a distinct group, and groups engaged in a significant amount of deviant and law-breaking behaviour that has come to the attention of the police.[67]
In 2007, the Criminal Intelligence Service Canada (CISC) estimated there were 900 organized crime groups across the country including approximately 300 street gangs.[68] The ethnic and cultural backgrounds of gang members vary. Some research suggests that youth gang members come from many ethnic, geographic, demographic and socio-economic backgrounds.[69] Overall, youth at risk of joining or already involved in gangs tend to come from backgrounds of inequality and social disadvantage. By the time they join, most gang members have already become involved in illegal drug use, crime and violence or dropped out of school. In Western Canada, Aboriginal youth are at higher risk of being recruited into a gang compared to non-Aboriginal youth.[70] One study suggests that 22% of all gang members in Canada are Aboriginal, with some 800-1000 members in the Prairies alone.[71]
The link between sexual exploitation, trafficking and youth gangs is very evident in the case of domestic trafficking,[72] and relates to gang activity in the Atlantic Provinces, Quebec, Ontario and Western Canada. CISC estimates that the profits derived from prostitution by organized criminal networks in Canada range from $300 to $1,500 a day per person, so there are clearly huge incentives to engage in trafficking and related exploitation.
The activities of gang members in your city and surrounding area should be taken into account in forming an overall strategy to prevent trafficking and exploitation. This should also include initiatives focused on youth gang members in custody and on their return to the community. Rehabilitation programmes can help to prevent their return to trafficking and exploitation.
Questions to consider for your city/catchment area
Key sources/contacts
Children and youth involved in gangs
·         How many children and youth are members of criminal gangs in your city?
·         What is the demographic profile of gang members?
·         How many girls are being recruited into gangs, what is their role?
·         Are gangs associated with particular neighbourhoods or ethnic/cultural groups?
·         What is ‘driving’ gang activity (disaffection, profit, insecurity)?
·         Are the gangs linked to human trafficking or sexual exploitation?
·         What is the victimization rate among gang members?
·         Is a strategy in place to tackle gang-related activities?
·         Which organizations are already engaged with existing gangs?
·         What action is being taken to reduce recruitment of girls?
·         What are the priorities for further action?
·         Local police data
·         NGO’s/community groups
·         Youth Justice

Technology and sexual exploitation
The huge increase in cell phone technology and social networking over the past ten years has created a whole new meeting platform among children and young people and their acquaintances, but it also facilitates access to them by others.
Internet luring was prohibited in the Criminal Code in 2002 (section 172.1). Since that time, the number of incidents has increased every year with 464 incidents reported in 2006-2007.[73] Young people are themselves, through their use of ‘sexting’ via text messaging, photographs or videos, often divulging too much personal information without being aware of the risks. As the Senate Committee reports, the Internet has become a place for children to explore their developing sexuality.[74]
Concern about the existence of websites promoting sexual exploitation has existed for a number of years. These activities have also been facilitated by the growth of the Internet. It is important to consider the options for preventing such exploitation and increasing awareness of the risks in your municipality.
Questions to consider for your city/catchment area
Key sources/contacts
Technology and sexual exploitation
·         How aware are people about the risks of ‘sexting’ and of child luring for sexual exploitation?
·         Is the local travel and hotel industry taking steps to raise awareness?
·         Are there awareness-raising campaigns in your city?
·         Are there services to help parents, teachers and young people to increase awareness about Internet luring, learn about prevention, and build capacity?
·         Local and provincial police/RCMP
·         Hotel industry
·         Media Awareness Network
·         Cybertip.ca
9.3 Women at risk – trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation
For women, their status as adults means that they are seen as responsible, and their involvement in prostitution or sex work or the sex industry generally is more likely to be judged a ‘choice’. It may be difficult for observers to distinguish between those forced into prostitution, those for whom it seems the only option to earn money, and those who have chosen sex work as a profession.
History of care, abuse or prior victimization
What is clear is that women with a past history as children or young women of family abuse, being in care, or in conflict with the law, are also likely to be at risk as adults of being exploited sexually. In general, the risk factors are the same, but will be exacerbated by substance abuse, homelessness, conflict with the law, and often by lack of education and employment skills.
Women involved in the sex industry
Adult women involved in the sex industry may also be at risk of domestic trafficking. Through gang involvement, they may be forced into prostitution. They may also be forced by a pimp whom they consider to be a boyfriend. In both situations, forced prostitution is trafficking. Victims from other countries are likely to include adult women recruited for fictitious jobs in the service and beauty industry or as dancers, etc. Some women who choose to migrate to Canada may similarly find themselves forced to work in the sex industry, but the numbers are difficult to estimate. In 1997 a series of raids on massage parlours in Toronto resulted in the arrest of Thai and Malaysian women who were illegal migrants recruited to work in the sex trade. Once they arrived, their passports were taken and they were forced to pay debt bonds of $30,000-$35,000 and work long hours.[75]
Questions to consider for your city/catchment area
Key sources/contacts
Women involved in the sex industry
·         How many women are known to be engaged in prostitution in the city/catchment area?
·         What is the demographic profile of these women?
·         Where do they come from?
·         What proportion has chosen sex work as a profession?
·         What proportion ended up in sex work because of their difficult childhoods/youth, and lack of alternatives?
·         What proportion may be victims of domestic trafficking?
·         What proportion may be victims of international trafficking?
·         Are there increasing numbers of immigrant women working in bars, the service sector and the beauty/aesthetics industries?
·         What is the profile of foreign sex workers working in the city and who are their clients?
·         Are the numbers increasing?
·         In which areas of the city do these women work and live?
·         What policies and services exist to support them?
·         Surveys
·         Interviews with service workers, police, hotel and transport staff
·         Interviews with sex workers, immigrant community organizations
·         Local police data
·         Local hospitals
·         Local health clinics
·         Immigration services

Women who are homeless, in shelters and second stage housing
Poverty is a major causal factor for homelessness among women, often associated with low incomes or assistance rates and the absence of affordable housing. Women with children experience even greater difficulties finding affordable housing and services. Once on the street, their risk of trafficking and exploitation are increased in the absence of access to legitimate work. Violence in the home is another significant reason why women seek alternative shelter. In Canada, homeless women and those living in shelters and supportive living are likely to have experienced physical and sexual abuse as children, and/or be victims of spousal assaults as adults.
Unlike men’s, women’s homelessness is largely “invisible.” Homeless women, including those with children, are less likely to stay in shelters and more likely to stay with friends or family, or other informal arrangements. For young women, homelessness and the need for a place to stay may involve trading sex, which can lead to deeper involvement in the sex trade and into trafficking situations.
Among Aboriginal people the rates of homelessness and living in sheltered accommodation are high. In the City of Winnipeg, for example, some 8% of the population identified themselves as Aboriginal in 2001, but they represented 60-70% of the homeless population.[76] In the Greater Vancouver Region, Aboriginals represent 2% of the overall population but 30% of the homeless population. Of these, 35% were women, higher than the percentage for homeless non-Aboriginal women.
Foreign students, recent immigrants, refugees, migrants
Women who are newcomers to Canada may be at risk of exploitation for a number of reasons. Being unfamiliar with Canadian social and cultural customs, not being fluent in English or French, arriving without much income or a settled and reasonably paid job, may all contribute to insecurity and vulnerability. Women who arrive as refugee claimants, for example, are unlikely to have sufficient resources to provide good shelter and daily needs. While some urban areas have a number of cultural organizations which provide support for people arriving from their region or country, they may not cater to all new immigrant families nor are they always easily found. Some of these women may end up homeless and in shelters following crises such as job losses or partner abuse. The temporary or lack of immigration status for migrants significantly increases their vulnerability to exploitation.[77] Through the use of force and threats, traffickers manipulate the desire of migrants to remain in Canada permanently.
Questions to consider for your city/catchment area
Key sources/contacts
Women who are homeless or in shelters
·         How many homeless women, and is this increasing?
·         What is the demographic profile of this population?
·         How many women in supportive living facilities and shelters in the city? Is the number increasing?
·         What is the demographic profile of these women?
·         What are the reasons for these women to be in shelters/supportive living?
·         What other services and policies are needed to provide them with protection from exploitation?
·         Local shelters
·         NGO’s/ community agencies that work with women
·         Victims Services
·         Refugee and Immigrant support groups
Foreign students, recent immigrants, refugees, migrants
·         How many foreign students, recent immigrant, refugee and migrant women are living in your city?
·         Where do they come from?
·         What are their circumstances and needs (housing, income, languages, work and training)?
·         What is their risk of sexual exploitation?
·         What policies and/or services exist to support them?
What are the gaps in services, how can they be filled?

9.4 Populations at risk – trafficking for the purposes of labour exploitation
Foreign nationals – migrant workers, foreign visitors and students, persons without immigration status
Migrant and temporary workers have been coming to Canada on a regular basis for decades. A range of temporary foreign worker programs exist which share the objectives of helping to address Canada’s labour shortages and protecting foreign national participants.[78] Some 150,000 persons enter Canada each year to work in industry and agricultural jobs, and in private homes. The Seasonal Agricultural Worker Programme, established in 1966, brings 25,000 workers to Canada each year, for example. Seasonal workers depart each year; others enter on temporary one to two year work visas requested by their employers. The temporary status of these foreign nationals, along with the hope of many to stay in Canada permanently, may make some vulnerable to exploitative third parties and employers. For these same reasons, other foreign nationals such as students and visitors may also be vulnerable to exploitation depending on their personal circumstances, for example, their socio-economic status. Those most vulnerable, however, would be persons who do not have immigration status and consequently fear being returned to their country of origin by authorities.
The International Labour Organization has established a set of indicators for assessing whether or not people are being exploited in their work situation (see box). In Canada, regulations governing temporary workers vary between the provinces and territories. Manitoba has recently increased its regulations and inspection to prevent foreign worker labour exploitation. Nevertheless, many temporary workers are still vulnerable to exploitation by employers, and often unaware of their rights or where to obtain advice. Live-in caregivers, many of whom come from the Philippines, often work in private homes where pay, hours and conditions are harder to regulate than on industrial or agricultural sites.
International Labour Organization (ILO) Indicators of trafficking of adults for labour exploitation[79]
Strong indicators of exploitation:
·         Excessive working days or hours, including the concept of forced overtime, being denied breaks and free time, being on call 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and being subjected to a heavy and excessive workload vis-à-vis the working hours.
Medium indicators of exploitation:
·         Bad living conditions as indicated by a lack of freedom of choice as to the location or living conditions, being forced to live in overcrowded, unhealthy, unsanitary conditions, or where there is limited or no privacy.
·         Hazardous work, which can relate to the nature of the task or the hazardous working environment, such as extreme heat or cold, and can also comprise degrading, humiliating, and dirty work.
·         No respect of labour laws or contract including cases where the victim was forced to work without or under an unlawful contract, where the contract was not respected or where there was deception about the nature of the job, the employer, or the possibility to work.
·         No social protection as indicated by the denial of social insurance and sick leave as well as being forced to work during pregnancy.
·         Low or no salary and wage manipulation which include cases where the individual receives “goods”/ “in-kind” payment.
·         Very bad working conditions.
The RCMP has suggested that both the Live-in Caregiver Programme and the Seasonal Agricultural Worker Programme are open to exploitation and abuse by traffickers,[80] and additional safeguards to address this are set out in the National Action Plan. Labour exploitation is strongly associated with specific places of risk including schools and malls for young girls, transport hubs, border areas, certain industries, and remote and rural areas. In Canada, there are remote and rural male-dominated centres such as logging and mining or natural resource exploitation sites, and agricultural areas, which present specific challenges especially for women working in these remote settings, often in service sectors.
Questions to consider for your city/catchment area
Key sources/contacts
Foreign nationals – migrant workers, foreign students, persons without immigration status
·         How many migrants/temporary foreign workers, foreign students and persons without immigration status are living in the city?
·         What industries, jobs are they working in?
·         What educational institutions are they attending?
·         Are the numbers increasing?
·         What is the background and demographic profile of this population?
·         What are their working conditions and pay?
·         Are they aware of their rights, do they have any supports and services?
·         What services and policies are needed to provide them with greater protection from exploitation?
·         Labour offices
·         Citizenship and Immigration Canada
·         NGO’s/ community agencies working temporary workers
·         Victims Services
·         Refugee and immigrant support groups

10. Addressing demand
Policies to prevent trafficking and other related forms of exploitation need to confront the issue of the demand for services. The demand side of human trafficking is often neglected in favour of support to victims and prosecution of traffickers. Yet demand is at the root of trafficking and related forms of exploitation since the greater the demand, the greater the profits for the exploiters. Those involved in trafficking and exploitation include a number of groups: those who are knowingly involved; those who enable it to take place by turning a ‘blind eye’ or failing to regulate activities, and those who directly use the services of trafficked victims. In other words, populations involved in the demand and supply of trafficking range from street gangs, pimps, commercial bars, salons, hotel owners/staff to “Johns” and clients of strip clubs, escort agencies and massage parlours, and from purchasers of goods produced through forced labour to private employers and third parties.
In developing the broad city profile, the safety audit should have provided a greater understanding of the types of industries or businesses involved in trafficking for forced labour or sexual exploitation in your city, and the general location of activity. Further research, interviews and surveys may help to assess the extent of knowledge and awareness about trafficking in target industries and places.
Questions to consider for your city/catchment area
Key sources/contacts
Traffickers, enablers, users – sexual exploitation
·         What is known about the traffickers in your city and catchment area?
·         What industries exist within your city that may use or enable sexual exploitation and where are they located?
·         Are there any third party agencies recruiting workers in your city/Province?
·         Who are the enablers/observers of sexual exploitation?
·         How many Johns are there in your city?
·         How big is the problem?
·         What services or programs exist that are targeting the demand side of sexual exploitation?
·         What is their background and demographic profile of this population?
·         What services and policies are needed to reduce demand?
·         Police
·         Labour offices
·         NGO’s/ community agencies working temporary workers
·         Victims Services
·         Refugee and immigrant support groups
·         Third party agencies

Traffickers, Enablers, Users – Labour Exploitation
·       What is known about people exploiting labour in your city and catchment area?
·       What industries may use or enable labour exploitation?
·       Who are the enablers/observers of labour exploitation?
·       How big is the problem?
·       What services or programs are targeting the demand side of labour exploitation?
·       Are there any codes of ethics for companies?
Do local companies monitor their supply chain?
Annexes
Annex A: Glossary of Terms (alphabetical order)
Child sexual exploitation involves the act of coercing, luring or engaging a child who is under the age of eighteen, into a sexual act, and involvement in the sex trade or pornography, with or without the child’s consent, in exchange for money, drugs, shelter, food, protection or other necessities.
Demand refers to the need for inexpensive labour where markets can be satisfied through illegal migration, smuggling of migrants and trafficking in people from outside and within a country. This is increased by the existence of unregulated labour sectors, such as domestic work and the sex industry, which do not allow the intervention of labour authorities.
Diversity refers to the conditions, expressions and experiences of different groups such as age, culture, ethnicity, education, gender, disability, sexual orientation, migration status, geography, language and religious beliefs.
Disaggregated data refers to the data broken down by age, race, ethnicity, income, education, etc. This is sometimes referred to as gender-disaggregated data.
Forced or compulsory labour: ‘all work or service which is exacted from any person under the menace of any penalty and for which the said person has not offered himself voluntarily.’ ILO Forced Labour Convention, 1930 C29.
Gender refers to the socially constructed roles and relationships, personality traits, attitudes, behaviours, values, relative power and influence that a particular society considers appropriate for men and women.
Gender-based analysis (GBA) is a method for examining a policy, program or initiative for its varying impacts on diverse groups of women and men, girls and boys.
Migrant refers to a person who is engaged or has been engaged in a remunerated activity in a country of which he or she is not a national. (definition from United Nations Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families)
Push and pull factors are inter-related and contribute to trafficking in persons. “Push” factors include extreme poverty, unemployment, lack of education, inadequate social programs, gender-based inequality, war and conflict situations, and political unrest in countries of origin. “Pull” factors include a globalized, free-market economy that has increased the demand for cheap labour, goods and services in many countries. Victims may also be “pulled” into trafficking through the promise of money and what is seen as a better life.
Smuggling, often confused with human trafficking, involves the procurement of an illegal entry into another country for the purpose of financial or material benefit. Persons who have been smuggled may pay large sums of money and may enter a country clandestinely, or through deception, such as the use of fraudulent documents. Unlike trafficking victims, the smuggled person usually consents to be smuggled. The relationship between the smuggler and the smuggled person is a voluntary business transaction which usually ends after the border crossing. Smuggled migrants may become victims of trafficking which may make it difficult to distinguish between smuggling and trafficking.
Trafficking in persons or human trafficking, as the terms are interchangeable, is defined in the UN Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children as the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of deception, of the abuse of power or of the position of vulnerability or of the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control over another person, for the purposes of exploitation. Exploitation shall include, at a minimum, the exploitation of the prostitution of others or other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labour or services, slavery or practices similar to slavery, servitude or the removal of organs. Said another way, trafficking has the following components:
·         The Act (What is done): Recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons;
·         The Means (How it is done): Threat or use of force, coercion, abduction, fraud, deception, abuse of power or vulnerability, or giving payments or benefits to a person in control of the victim; and
·         The Purpose (Why it is done): For the purpose of exploitation, this includes exploiting the prostitution of others, sexual exploitation, forced labour, slavery or similar practices and the removal of organs.
Annex B: International laws and guidelines relevant to prevention of trafficking and other related exploitation
Instrument
Relevant sections
General

Universal Declaration on Human Rights (United Nations,1948) http://www.un.org/events/humanrights/2007/hrphotos/declaration%20_eng.pdf
Articles 3, 4, 5 and 23
United Nations Guidelines for Technical Assistance in the Field of Urban Crime Prevention (1995) (United Nations 1995)
Section 37
United Nations Guidelines for the Prevention of Crime (United Nations, 2002) http://www.un.org/en/ecosoc/docs/2002/resolution%202002-13.pdf
All
Convention on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings (Council of Europe, 2005) http://conventions.coe.int/Treaty/EN/Treaties/Html/197.htm
Articles 1, 2, 5, 6, 7, 10, 29, and 32
United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (United Nations, 2000) http://www.unodc.org/documents/treaties/untoc/publications/toc%20convention/tocebook-e.pdf
Articles 1, 29, 30, 31, and 34
Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children, Supplementing the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (United Nations 2003) http://www.uncjin.org/Documents/Conventions/dcatoc/final_documents_2/convention_%20traff_eng.pdf
P.P. 1, 2, and 5, and Articles 9, 10 and 11
Protocol against the Smuggling of Migrants by Land, Sea and Air, Supplementing the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (United Nations 2000) http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/pdfid/479dee062.pdf
Articles 2, 4, 7, 11 and 15
International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families (United Nations, 1990) http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/cmw.htm
P.P. 12 and 14
United Nations Declaration of Basic Principles of Justice for Victims of Crime and Abuse of Power (United Nations, 1985) http://www.un.org/documents/ga/res/40/a40r034.htm
Sections 4 and 5
Children

Convention Concerning the Prohibition and Immediate Action for the Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child Labour (International Labour Organization 1999) http://www.ilo.org/ilolex/cgi-lex/convde.pl?C182
Articles 1, 6, and 7
Convention on the Rights of the Child (United Nations 1990) http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc.htm
Articles 19, 33, 34, and 35
Convention on the Rights of the Child, Optional Protocol on the Sale of Children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography (United Nations 2002) http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc-sale.htm
P.P. 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 11 and Articles 8, 9, and 10
Women

Accelerating Efforts to Eliminate All Forms of Violence Against Women: Ensuring Due Diligence in Prevention (United Nations, 2010) http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/publisher,UNHRC,,,4c2b155f2,0.html
Sections 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 12, 18, and 19
Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women (United Nation 1994) http://www.unhchr.ch/huridocda/huridoca.nsf/(symbol)/a.res.48.104.en
P.P. 5, 6, 7, 12, and Article 4
Inter-American Convention on the Prevention , Punishment and Eradication of Violence against Women (Convention of Belem do Para) (Organization of American States 1994) http://www.oas.org/juridico/english/treaties/a-61.html
Article 10
Annex C: Canadian examples of prevention practices

Practice
Sexual Exploitation
Labour Exploitation
Legislation
Provincial legislation
Manitoba The Child and Family Services Act (mandatory reporting of child pornography)
Manitoba Workers Recruitment and Protection Act (2009). Enforcement office and 6 staff.
Governance
Establish permanent local task force or forum; mechanisms to coordinate information and action
BC Office to Combat Trafficking (OCTIP)
Manitoba Human Trafficking Interdepartmental Committee
Tracia’s Trust Sexual Exploitation Strategy

Situational Prevention
Local regulation and enforcement
Niagara Regulation of body rub parlors
Regulation of work place and employment situations; inspection and enforcement
Local protocols
Manitoba Code of Conducts with business, hotel and travel associations

Patrolling and surveillance of hot spots
Manitoba Citizen patrols; suspect tracking forms

General Awareness Raising
Public education and awareness raising
RCMP “I’m Not for Sale” campaign
Crime Stoppers “Blue Blindfold” campaign
Manitoba Hotel Association and Child Protection Services Campaign: “Stop Sex with Kids”

User awareness campaigns
Manitoba “Dear John: It’s rape not a date” campaign and conferences

Hotlines and public numbers for reporting, advice and help
Manitoba 24-7 Crisis Hotline
Alberta Mennonite Centre Temporary Foreign Worker Guidebook
Internet awareness
Manitoba Cybertip.ca; Media Awareness Network
Canadian Centre for Child Protection ‘The Door is not Locked’; ‘Zoe and Molly’

Education and awareness raising
Public Safety and PACT Ottawa TruckSTOP campaign
Manitoba Girl-to Girl and Boy to Boy
BC e-learning curriculum
Montreal Cinderella’s Silence (Centre de Jeunesse)
Montreal First Stop Programme for new arrivals
Targeted Awareness Raising
Local campaigns
Inclusive projects which support at risk populations, invite discussions with business sector, alert residents to how they can help
Projects to support migrant workers, local agricultural workers
Community and Neighbourhood Prevention
Projects to provide support and services
Montreal Street mediators
Manitoba Street Connections and Street Reach
Ma Mawi Wi Chi Itata Centre; Experiential worker training

Interventions
Interventions with high risk groups, reintegration for post care or custody groups
Manitoba Transition, Education and Resources for Females (TERF) transition out of the sex trade

End Notes
[1] While this tool can be used by smaller northern and rural communities, a separate one is desirable given the unique issues facing these often remote communities.
[2] Gender-Based Analysis (GBA) is a tool the federal government uses to assess the impacts of policies, programs or initiatives on diverse groups of women and men, girls and boys. GBA helps recognize and respond to the different situations and needs of the Canadian population. Gender is a major factor in GBA, but we must also take into consideration factors such as age, education, language, geography, culture and income. For more information, please visit http://www.swc-cfc.gc.ca/gba-acs/index-eng.html.
[3] The methodology for this tool draws extensively on The Guidance on Local Safety Audits (2008), produced by the European Forum for Urban Security with funding from Public Safety Canada (the National Crime Prevention Centre). http://www.ffsu.org/fileadmin/efus/secutopics/EFUS_Safety_Audit_e_WEB.pdf.
[5] E.g. the Live-in Caregiver Programme and the Temporary Foreign Worker Programme.
[6] See Annex A.
[7] See Annex B.
[8] See Annex B for a list of some of the other relevant international norms and standards and their preventive measures.
[9] See also the UN Guidelines for Technical Assistance in the Field of Urban Crime Prevention (1995).
[10] CISC (2008). Organized Crime and Domestic Trafficking in Persons in Canada, Strategic Intelligence Brief. Dalley, M. (2010). Hidden Abuse – Hidden Crime. The domestic trafficking of children and youth in Canada: the relationship to sexual exploitation, running away and children at risk of harm. Ottawa: RCMP.
[11] Human Trafficking in Canada (2010). Ottawa: RCMP.
[12] Globe and Mail, April 3rd and 4th 2012. Section A.
[13] Human Trafficking in Canada (2010). RCMP.
[14] Report of the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights (2012): Report on Organized Crime; CISC (2008) op. cit.
[15] Dalley (2010) op. cit., CISC (2008) op. cit.
[16] Sikka, A. (2009). Trafficking in Aboriginal Women and Girls in Canada, op. cit, p.24.
[17] Perrault, Samuel, (2011). Self-reported Internet Victimization in Canada (2009), Statistics Canada. http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/85-002-x/2011001/article/11530-eng.htm.
[18] Loughlin, J. & Taylor-Butts, A. (2009). Child Luring through the Internet. Statistics Canada Cat. No. 85-002-X Vol. 29, no. 1.
[19] More detailed information on at risk groups can be found in Part III.
[20] Sexual Abuse and Exploitation of Children and Youth: A Fact Sheet from the Department of Justice, Canada (2005); and Family Violence in Canada: A Statistical Profile. (2004). Cat. No. 85-224-XIE.
[21] Mulcahy, M. & Trocme. N. (2010). Children and Youth in Out-of Home-Care in Canada. CECW Information, #78E.
[22] Raising the Roof (2009). Youth Homelessness in Canada: The Road to Solutions. www.raisingtheroof.org
[23] Loughlin, J. & Taylor-Butts, A. (2009). Child Luring through the Internet. Op. cit.
[26] Native Women’s Association of Canada (2010). What Their Stories Tell Us: Research Findings from the Sisters in Spirit Initiative. http://www.nwac.ca/sites/default/files/reports/2010_NWAC_SIS_Report_EN.pdf
[27] Sikka, A. (2009). Addressing the Trafficking of Aboriginal Girls: Child Welfare and Criminal Justice Responsibilities Policy Brief Institute of Governance; and Trafficking in Aboriginal Women and Girls in Canada. Institute of Governance.
[28] Sikka, A. (2009). Trafficking in Aboriginal Women and Girls in Canada op. cit. p. 24.
[29] International Centre for Criminal Law Reform and Criminal Justice Policy (ICCLR). Towards Human Trafficking Prevention: National and International Expert Group Meetings (31st May 2011), Vancouver.
[31] Eg. Tracia’s Trust Manitoba Sexual Exploitation Strategy www.manitoba.ca/fs/traciastrust
[33] Ontario, Nova Scotia
[34] The members include Vancouver, Surrey, Edmonton, Calgary, Regina, Saskatoon, Winnipeg, Waterloo, Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, Quebec City, Saint John, and Halifax.
[36] The terms safety audit and safety diagnosis are often used interchangeably, and refer to the same process of systematic assessment of problems concerning community safety and crime prevention.
[37] This is a safety audit tool published by the European Forum for Urban Safety in 2008, with support from the Government of Canada (Public Safety Canada), which brings together expertise and knowledge about conducting safety audits from many parts of the world.
[38] European Forum for Urban Security. Guidance on Local Safety Audits: A Compendium of International Practice. Paris: EFUS, 2008. 16. Print.
[39] Status of Women Canada (SWC) has a gender-based analysis research guide about integrating both gender and other variables (http://www.swc-cfc.gc.ca/gba-acs/guide-eng.html) and a checklist (http://www.swc-cfc.gc.ca/gba-acs/list-aide-eng.html) with other resources at http://www.swc-cfc.gc.ca/gba-acs/resources-ressources-eng.html.
[40] See Guidance on Local Safety Audits op. cit. Part C.
[41] Based on ‘Safety Audit Report Template’ developed by CSIR South Africa, reproduced in the Guidance on Local Safety Audits, p. 28.
[42] Guidance on Safety Audits (2007) Table 14 p. 33.
[43] Reproduced from the Guidance on Local Safety Audits, Appendix A, p. 124.
[44] Native Women’s Association of Canada (2010). What Their Stories Tell Us: Research Findings from the Sisters in Spirit Initiative. http://www.nwac.ca/sites/default/files/reports/2010_NWAC_SIS_Report_EN.pdf
[45] Ibid.
[46] Standing Committee on the Status of Women (Feb. 2007) Turning Outrage into Action to Address Trafficking for the Purpose of Sexual Exploitation in Canada. http://www.parl.gc.ca/HousePublications/Publication.aspx?DocId=2738918&Language=E&Mode=1&Parl=39&Ses=1
[47] Sikka, A. (2009). Trafficking in Aboriginal Women and Girls in Canada op. cit. p. 24.
[48] Standing Senate Committee on Human Rights (November 2011). The Sexual Exploitation of Children in Canada: the Need for National Action.
[49] Senate Standing Committee on Human Rights (November 2011). The Sexual Exploitation of Children in Canada: the Need for National Action.
[50] Department of Justice (modified December 1, 2011). Age of Consent to Sexual Activity. http://www.justice.gc.ca/eng/rp-pr/other-autre/clp/faq.html
[51] Article 35: ‘States Parties shall take all appropriate national, bilateral and multilateral measures to prevent the abduction of, the sale of or traffic in children for any purpose or in any form.’
[52] McIntyre, S. (2008). Under the Radar: The Sexual Exploitation of Young Men – Western Canadian Edition. www.child.alberta.ca
[53] Family Violence in Canada: A Statistical Profile (Statistics Canada, 2011) http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/85-224-x/85-224-x2010000-eng.pdf
[54] Dauvergne, M. and Johnson, H. (2001) Children Witness Family Violence. Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics. http://publications.gc.ca/Collection-R/Statcan/85-002-XIE/0060185-002-XIE.pdf
[55] Sikka, A. (2009). Op. cit.
[56] The Canadian Press (February 19, 2012) Canadian Foster Care in Crisis, Experts Say http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2012/02/19/foster-care-cp.html
[57] Best Interests of the Child: Meaning and Application in Canada (2009). Some children may be placed into foster care without full safety checks while others are in supervised apartments or overcrowded homes. http://www.lawm.utoronto.ca/documents/conferences/BestInterestsChild-Report_en.pdf;
[58] Vandna Sinha, Nico Trocmé, Barbara Fallon, Bruce MacLaurin, Elizabeth Fast, Shelley Thomas Prokop, et al (2011). Kiskisik Awasisak: Remember the Children. Understanding the Overrepresentation of First Nations Children in the Child Welfare System. Ontario: Assembly of First Nations.
[59] Sikka, A. (May 2009). Addressing the Trafficking of Aboriginal Girls: Child Welfare and Criminal Justice Responsibilities.
[60] Provincial Advocate for Children and Youth (2011) Resource Voice Connection. Report to the Legislature 2010-2011. Toronto.
[61] Youth Leaving Care – How Do They Fare? Briefing Paper (September 2005). Prepared for the Modernizing Income Security for Working Age Adults (MISWAA) Project.
[62] Ibid.
[63] Raising the Roof (2009). Youth Homelessness in Canada: The Road to Solutions. www.raisingtheroof.org
[64] Ibid.
[65] Public Health Agency of Canada, 2006. Street Youth in Canada: Findings from the Enhanced Surveillance of Canadian Street Youth, 1999-2003, p. 2.
[66] Raising the Roof (2009). Op. cit.
[67] National Crime Prevention Centre (2007) Youth Gangs in Canada: What do we know? http://www.publicsafety.gc.ca/cnt/rsrcs/pblctns/gngs-cnd/index-eng.aspx
[68] Report of the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights (2012). The State of Organized Crime, p. 8.
[69] Wortley, S. and Tanner, J. (2004). “Social Groups or Criminal Organizations? The Extent and Nature of Youth Gang Activity in Toronto” in Kidd, B. and Phillips, J. (Ed.) From Enforcement and Prevention to Civic Engagement: Research on Community Safety. Toronto: Centre of Criminology, University of Toronto.
[70] National Crime Prevention Centre (2007) Youth Gangs in Canada: What do we know? Op. cit.
[71] Mark Totten (February 26, 2009). Preventing Aboriginal Youth Gang Involvement in Canada: A Gendered Approach. http://www.nwac.ca/sites/default/files/reports/TottenAPRCGangGenderpaperFeb2609.pdf
[72] CISC (2008). Organized crime and domestic trafficking in persons in Canada. Strategic Intelligence Brief. Ottawa: CISC.
[73] Loughlin, J. & Taylor-Butts, A. (2009). Child Luring through the Internet. Statistics Canada Cat. No. 85-002-X Vol. 29, no. 1. http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/85-002-x/2009001/article/10783-eng.htm
[74] Standing Senate Committee on Human Rights (November 2011). The Sexual Exploitation of Children in Canada: The Need for National Action. http://www.parl.gc.ca/Content/SEN/Committee/411/ridr/rep/rep03nov11-e.pdf
[75] Trafficking In Women Including Thai Migrant Sex Workers In Canada (2000). Prepared for the Status of Women Canada June 2000 http://www.mhso.ca/mhso/Trafficking_women.pdf
[76] NAWC (2007). Aboriginal Women and Homelessness. An Issue Paper. www.laa.gov.nl.ca
[77] Paradis, E. et al., (2008). Better off in a Shelter? A Year of Homelessness and Housing among Status Immigrant, Non-Status Migrant and Canadian-Born Families. CUSC Research Paper #213 July. www.urbancentre.utoronto.ca
[78] Examples include the Live-In Caregiver Program and the Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program.
[79] ILO (2009) Operational indicators of trafficking in human beings. Results of the Delphi Survey implemented by the ILO and the European Commission. (Revised edition September 2009). Pp. 1: http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---ed_norm/---declaration/documents/publication/wcms_105884.pdf
[80] RCMP (2010). Human Trafficking in Canada. Ottawa.



and..

3 charges have been laid under section 118 of the Immigration and Refugee ... smuggling of migrants and trafficking ... Patrolling and surveillance of hot spots.

http://www.publicsafety.gc.ca/cnt/rsrcs/pblctns/lcl-sfty-dtgd/index-eng.aspx



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IMMIGRATION WATCH CANADA...
Canada – Immigration Intake, 1860 to 2013
Home
Immigration Watch Canada is an organization of Canadians who believe that immigration has to serve the interests of its own citizens. It cannot be turned into a social assistance / job-finding program for people from other countries. It should not be a method to suppress wages and provide employers with an unending supply of low-wage labour. It should never be a social engineering experiment that is conducted on Canada’s mainstream population in order to make it a minority. **
But immigration has become those three things.
Why? In particular, why has Canada’s average 250,000 per year immigration intake remained in place for over 23 years?
The answer is that for many decades, Canada’s major political parties have assumed that, on the immigration issue in particular, they know better than average Canadians. This attitude and the promotion of political party self-interest manifested itself particularly in 1990 when one political party (the Progressive Conservatives) increased immigration levels to 250,000 per year.
At the time they did this, they actually announced they were doing so in order to capture more of the immigrant vote. This may sound hard to believe because it is so brazen, but it is a fact. Since then, all other parties have adopted the same policy. All pretend that their actions are helping people in the rest of the world and that this immigration flood is also literally and figuratively enriching Canadian society.
The reality is that Canada’s average 250,000 per year immigration intake since 1990 has been far too high. In fact, Canada’s intake is the highest per capita in the world. And it has obviously been destructive and senseless.
What are some examples of the destruction and senselessness?
Our high intake has had major negative economic consequences for Canadians who are looking for work. In fact, it has forced many of Canada’s own unemployed to compete with immigrants for a limited number of jobs and it has impoverished many Canadians .
And speaking of impoverishment, relentless high immigration has resulted in two developments : (1) relentless high demand for a basic human need such as housing and (2) relentless increases in house prices. The urban area which is the best example of this is Metro Vancouver where house prices are now the second highest in the world. Much of the population can no longer afford house ownership. In cases where the existing population has bought housing, they have had to take on huge mortgages.
This development and the continued pursuit of the “Diversity” social engineering project have led many Canadians to conclude that they are being ethnically cleansed and that Canada is being re-colonized.
Finally, many Canadians see with their own eyes that Canada’s high intake has also turned many areas of the country into crowded, grid-locked, environmental disasters-in-progress—duplicates of the environmental catastrophes many recent immigrants come from.
We repeat one basic question :
Why Is Canada bringing in 250,000+ immigrants per year? Ottawa has never provided a logical answer to that question. In fact, it has pretended that current immigration is no different from past immigration. It has also withheld vital information or tried to deceive Canadians by making false claims about the benefits of immigration.
We believe Canada should have some immigration, but that immigration levels should be reduced to about 25,000, that is, to about 10% of the current annual 250,000 intake. We advocate that the 25,000 intake level should be kept in place indefinitely to compensate for the immigration disaster that has occurred in the past 23 years.
We also advocate a significant reduction to Canada’s Temporary Foreign Worker program which in 2012 allowed well over 300,000 non-Canadians to work in Canada. This program is being widely abused by employers and should probably be reduced to nearly zero. In any recession (this past one and others), it is madness for a country to be importing large numbers of immigrants as well as large numbers of Temporary Foreign Workers.
In addition to a reduction of Canada’s immigration intake to 25,000 per year and a dramatic cut to Canada’s Temporary Foreign Worker program, we also call for major reform to many of Canada’s other immigration policies. (See our Basics section for details.)
** For background on major immigration policy changes made in the 1960’s and 70’s, click on the following summaries of excellent research done by reporter Doug Collins in his book “Immigration : The Destruction Of English Canada” :
French
Immigration Watch Canada est une organisation de Canadiens qui croient que l’immigration doit servir les intérêts de ses propres citoyens et ne doit pas être transformé en un programme d’aide sociale / de recherche d’emploi pour les personnes d’autres pays. Elle ne doit pas non plus etre une méthode pour diminuer les salaires et fournir aux employeurs un approvisionnement sans fin de main-d’œuvre à faible cout. Finalement, Les pratiques d’immigration ne devraient jamais être une expérience d’ingénierie sociale qui est menée sur la population du Canada afin d’en faire une minorité. **
Mais l’immigration est devenue ces trois choses.
Pourquoi? En particulier, pourquoi le chiffre de 250 000 nouveaux arrivants par an en moyenne est le meme depuis plus de 23 ans?
La réponse est que pendant de nombreuses décennies, les principaux partis politiques du Canada ont cru que, sur la question de l’immigration en particulier, ils sont mieux informes que la moyenne des Canadiens. Cette attitude et la promotion d’interets propres aux partis se manifestent notamment en 1990, quand un parti politique (les progressistes-conservateurs) a augmenté les niveaux d’immigration à 250 000 par an.
Au moment où ils l’ont fait, ils ont en fait annoncé qu’ils le faisaient pour augmenter leur part du vote immigrant.Cela peut sembler difficile à croire mais c’ est un fait. Depuis lors, toutes les autres partis ont adopté cette même politique. Tous prétendent que leurs actions aident des individus dans le reste du monde et que ce flot d’immigration ,au sens propre et au figuré,enrichit la société canadienne.
La réalité est que cette moyenne de 250 000 immigrants par an depuis 1990 est beaucoup trop élevée.En fait, ce pourcentage par habitant, le plus eleve dans le monde,a évidemment été destructeur et insensée.
Quels pouraient etre des exemples de cette destruction et de cette absurdite?
Cette augmentation massive de la population a eu des conséquences économiques négatives pour les Canadiens qui cherchent du travail. En fait, elle a forcé un grand nombre de chômeurs à rivaliser avec les immigrants pour un nombre limité d’emplois et elle a appauvri de nombreux Canadiens.
Et en parlant de l’appauvrissement, cette forte et incessante immigration a resulte en deux développements: (1) une forte et incessante demande pour un besoin humain fondamental, comme le logement et (2) les augmentations incessantes des prix des logements. La zone urbaine qui en est le meilleur exemple de cela est Metro Vancouver, où les prix des maisons sont maintenant les deuxièmes les plus eleves dans le monde. Une grande partie de la population ne peut plus se permettre de faire l’achat d’une propriété. Et quand cette meme population fait l’achat d’un logement, elle doit contracter d’énormes prêts hypothécaires.
Ce développement et la poursuite continuelle de ce projet d’ingénierie sociale nomme la “diversité” ont conduit de nombreux Canadiens à conclure qu’ils sont victime de nettoyage ethnique et que le Canada est en processus de re-colonisation.
Enfin, de nombreux Canadiens voient de leurs propres yeux que cette augmentation élevée de la population Canadienne a également transforme de nombreuses régions du pays en zones surpeuplees et congestionnes qui sont de veritables catastrophes ecologique en cours de developpement,similaires a celles dont de nombreux immigrants sont issus.
Nous répétons une question fondamentale:
Pourquoi le Canada admet 250,000+ immigrants par année? Ottawa n’a jamais fourni une réponse logique à cette question. En fait, il a ete prétendu que l’immigration actuelle ne différe aucunement de celle du passé. Les gouvernements ont également cache des informations vitales ou tenté de tromper les Canadiens en faisant de fausses déclarations sur les avantages de l’immigration.
Nous croyons que le Canada devrait avoir une certaine immigration, mais que les niveaux d’immigration devrait être réduit à environ 25 000, ce est à environ 10% du courant annuel 250,000 admission. Nous préconisons que ce niveau de 25 000 devrait être maintenu en place indéfiniment pour contrebalancer la catastrophe demographique qui s’est produite dans les 23 dernières années.
Nous préconisons également une réduction significative des travailleurs étrangers temporaires programme du Canada,qui en 2012 a permis a plus de 300 000 non-Canadiens de travailler au Canada. Ce programme est grandement abusé par les employeurs et devrait probablement être réduit à près de zéro. Durant toute récession (la derniere et les precedentes), c’est une folie pour un pays d’admettre un grand nombre d’immigrants et de travailleurs temporaires étrangers.
En plus d’une réduction du nombre dl’immigrants à 25 000 annuellement et une réduction radicale du programme des travailleurs étrangers temporaires au Canada,nous appelons également à une réforme majeure concernant d’autres politiques d’immigration du Canada. (Voir notre section Basics pour plus de détails.)
** Pour des informations sur les principaux changements de politique d’immigration faites dans les années 1960 et 70, cliquez sur les extraits de l’excellent livre “La Destruction du Canada anglais»:par le journaliste Doug Collins.



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