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The Canadian Lesbian & Gay Archives / Materials / Records / Related documents |
| What we got: The details | |
| Page 2 / Criminal Code reform / Appx 3,000 words |
What we got: The details
Criminal Code reform
1974
1976
1979
1980
1981
Proposal also includes -- for the first time -- a "kiddie porn" provision, making it a crime to involve anyone under 16 in "any sexually explicit conduct" for the purpose of producing a "visual representation" of it.
1982
1983
(We Demand in 1971 had not addressed obscenity provisions in the Criminal Code. But they would become a major battlefront, and would eventually affect aspects of age of consent. So I will continue to report stories here on obscenity sections of the Code.)
1985
Exceptions to "buggery" and "gross indecency" proposed to extend to more than two people having sex -- except where any of them is under 18. Pornography proposals call for tougher penalties for creation or distribution of material seen as violent or "degrading" (though report says the term may be too vague), and that involving "children" -- defined as anyone under 18 -- for which possession would also be a crime. So would creation or possession of material "which advocates, encourages, condones or presents as normal the sexual abuse of children." Story notes that, since most sex with anyone under 18 is defined in law as abuse, "it would become illegal to advocate lowering, let alone abolishing, the age of consent."
1986
1987
1988
1989
1992
1993
1995
What we demanded; What we got (Summary on Criminal Code reform)