“We Knew No One Else Had Our Back except Us”: Recommendations for Creating an Accountability Care Framework with Sex Workers in Eastern Canada
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Supports and Notions of Care
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Profile of Participants
2.2. Process
- Self-care: Involves the acts taken at an individual level to care for oneself;
- Community care: Describes a larger network of supports that, at times, is reciprocal. Includes individuals as well as programs and agencies;
- Collective care: Includes the systems and structures that create a ripple effect that support and/or hinder people engaged in sex work—legislation, policies, funding, and government services;
- Accountability care: The methods by which individuals, programs, and systems are held responsible and accountable. This accountability is necessary to build capacity for collective care and includes recommendations based on research findings.
3. Results
Community Care
“I need some kind of support system.”
I started the sex workers support group and that has been a really great community. It’s mostly a [social media] group where we can kind of just share things, like I posted this there and told them to sign up. And, so, yeah, it’s really nice to be able to ask someone like ‘have you seen this guy before’ and be like ‘oh yeah, he likes ’em young, oh yeah he’s … don’t see him.’
I’ve heard so often, like, ‘I don’t know where I would be if I didn’t have someone to talk to that understands’ so, you know, to be able to have someone to message at two o’clock in the morning or a call that understands and has been there and done the same kind of work. That makes a big difference.
Like you gotta have somebody know, like just in case, or if there is any way you could have security, or get to know the person first, just to be sure. ‘Cause it’s, scary. Like the sex worker died here not long ago, was murdered by an out-call, so, you never know.
There’s some girls, like myself, who are still in the industry, and there are some that are still kind of there because they have no choice, you know, to feed their kids or whatever and there are other women who are out completely but still go there for, like, therapy.
Because there’s [Program B] and then there’s [Program A], both are separate things …. [Program A] has the case management support to help those exit sex work, while [Program B] has the community support aspect, and having both of those services under one roof would be ideal.
…She was there and talked about, “Do you want to report it, and what would that look like if we did? We don’t have to. Would you feel comfortable with an emergency protection order?” Or like, “What would make you feel safe right now?” And she covered everything, right? … Everything. They are the best support. If they were everywhere that would be awesome.
There’s nothing out there, as far as I’ve seen … Just because where it is such a small community, nobody thinks that people out there are doing it but like I always tell everyone, there’s a lot more of us than you would think.
If you do access a service, then someone’s gonna go see you access the service. Right? If you walk into some building in a rural community of like 500 people, some lady’s gonna be watching you out her window. And if she knows who you are she might call your mother, right?
4. Collective Care
[I] didn’t know whether it was legal, illegal, you know; what the boundaries were cause like I heard from some girls that it was legal to sell it but not legal to buy it … So I was kind of not entirely sure how to go about that, um, but where [Name of Street] is so close to the police station, um, I always had that fear, whenever I heard sirens, that they were coming for us.
I have like a business and it needs to be, you know, legit. I don’t wanna be just you know, I need to have things on paper. I need to be real … I have this money, I hired an accountant, I had a financial advisor, I want to pay taxes. Just tell me how to do it the right way.
Safe working conditions is an issue when you’re working on your own, even when you’re working on the street. Part of the Canadian law is that you’re not allowed to materially benefit from someone else’s work. So that means if my friend and I are working together we have a brothel, and that is a really big issue.
I feel that legalizing sex work is the only way, because if sex work was legalized they could regulate it. They could tax it if that’s what they really wanted. But for the most part, women should have somewhere, men should have somewhere safe that they feel they are able to go. There should be regular STD checks because every time you go see a sex worker it’s a risk you’re taking, as well as the sex workers themselves taking this risk … It should be safe, and clean, and consensual.
Decriminalization takes away all of the [laws] … so you can do sex work. And there’s no conditions put in place … Because a lot of people don’t understand the difference and so you’ll hear well-meaning people saying, “We should really legalize sex work.” And I’m going, “No, we shouldn’t.” Us sex workers don’t want that, we don’t want it to be legalized. That just makes it, it’s more problematic because we could still be charged for things because there’s still laws about sex work.
I had a doctor who I just never felt comfortable enough to say, ‘Hey, this is what I do, can I get, like, monthly testing or whatever?’ So, it’s definitely hard for people who don’t have access to good doctors to, to feel, I guess, safe enough, not judged, to say, ‘Hey, I’m a sex worker can I get monthly testing or whatever?’
And so, you’re not going to go to a therapist or a psychiatrist, the one prescribing you medication, and say that, “I’m having a bad day. And it’s not because I don’t enjoy sex work but because these experiences have happened to me this week and it’s …” They don’t want to hear it because you’ve put yourself in that situation.
One of the last meetings I had with my worker, she looked at me and said, ‘Just because you look good on paper doesn’t make you a good parent.’ Oh really? But it’s kind of funny when the public health person doesn’t have an issue with me … [Name] works with Child Services doesn’t have a problem with me, says I’m doing an awesome job, and for you—as a child worker—to come into my home or anybody else’s home … and say [that].
I didn’t go to the police because of, I was an escort and the stigma [of] that, or the role that police play in our, in our life is not a positive one. I didn’t need to go to the police station and be judged for being an escort, you know? To be judged for finding food to put on my children’s plate, you know?
If you get beaten up at work you are less likely to go to the police and say, ‘Hey, these are the details surrounding me being assaulted.’ If you were assaulted at any other type of job, you would have no fear [of] going to the police station right away. But when it comes to sex work, it’s something that you have to think over in your head. You know, am I going to get in trouble if I go to a police officer and say I’ve been assaulted and this is what happened. Or another big one is, are they going to believe that I was raped if I’m a sex worker? Which is a huge issue, because chances are if you had sex with someone against your will, they’re not going to believe you were sexually assaulted. You’re a sex worker. It sounds like you’re asking for it, but you’re not.
These are people too. These are women. These are somebody’s daughters, somebody’s mothers, somebody’s sisters that … [it] doesn’t matter what kind of background you come from—because I’m a mom, coming from a bad home … Something’s got to be put in place to protect these girls as well, because someone’s, somebody’s been hurt or killed because an asshole wanted to, “Well I can shoot a whore” for lack of a better word or lack of a better term. “She’s a whore so she’s just trash.”
There’s a fear of telling people you’re a sex worker, right? And so, for a lot of sex workers, it’s not that they don’t have access to certain things, but it’s that they are too embarrassed to seek them out, or they’re too ashamed to seek them out.
5. Limitations and Considerations
6. Conclusions
- Creating a liaison/task force between people in the sex work industry and municipal regions and provincial government;
- Developing guidelines and best practices across identified areas of collective care; and
- Creating education and training sessions led by and in consultation with sex workers.
6.1. Task Force Liaison
6.2. Guidelines and Best Practices
- Inclusive supports for all genders;
- Access to affordable housing and shelter;
- Improving access to food, clothing, no-wait counselling, the Internet, and cell phones;
- Uncomplicated healthcare access and universal dental and optical insurance;
- Rural supports for sex workers linked to broader programs so people can access them confidentially or anonymously;
- A central resource hub accessible in person or online, with 24 h support offering information on sexual and mental health topics, marketing, managing clients, and balancing finances;
- Creating policies and bylaws that affect the work safety for sex work is needed.
6.3. Ongoing Education and Training Led by and in Consultation with Sex Workers
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Sitter, K.C.; Grittner, A.; Pabia, M.R.; Jarvis, H. “We Knew No One Else Had Our Back except Us”: Recommendations for Creating an Accountability Care Framework with Sex Workers in Eastern Canada. Soc. Sci. 2022, 11, 366. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11080366
Sitter KC, Grittner A, Pabia MR, Jarvis H. “We Knew No One Else Had Our Back except Us”: Recommendations for Creating an Accountability Care Framework with Sex Workers in Eastern Canada. Social Sciences. 2022; 11(8):366. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11080366
Chicago/Turabian StyleSitter, Kathleen C., Alison Grittner, Mica R. Pabia, and Heather Jarvis. 2022. "“We Knew No One Else Had Our Back except Us”: Recommendations for Creating an Accountability Care Framework with Sex Workers in Eastern Canada" Social Sciences 11, no. 8: 366. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11080366
APA StyleSitter, K. C., Grittner, A., Pabia, M. R., & Jarvis, H. (2022). “We Knew No One Else Had Our Back except Us”: Recommendations for Creating an Accountability Care Framework with Sex Workers in Eastern Canada. Social Sciences, 11(8), 366. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11080366