The onset of long-term physical or psychological disabilities has substantial impacts on everyday life for individuals across the social determinants of health. In addition, access to ongoing health care and economic and social support may pose specific challenges for individuals dealing with a disability. Disability support in Ontario has been the focus of recent health and policy research. As discussions surface about prospective changes to public or private sources of disability support, there is value in learning from people with lived experiences of an illness or injury that prevents them from working.
Until relatively recently, health and social services professionals, researchers, policymakers, and the general public considered animal cruelty as a stand-alone issue, important to animals' well-being but of only marginal significance to individual and community health and safety.
This marginalization, based upon cultural themes that animals are merely property, that animal abuse is a normal occurrence among children and adolescents, and that human welfare priorities supersede animals' interests, is somewhat ironic. Other themes deeply embedded in Western philosophy express concern that children who abuse animals may grow up to exhibit escalating and dangerous interpersonal violence and antisocial behaviors.
In recent years there has been renewed interest in an idea dating back centuries — that acts of cruelty against animals can be a sentinel indicator – and often a predictor – of other forms of family and community violence. Research has documented relationships between childhood histories of animal cruelty and patterns of chronic interpersonal aggression. Animals often become victims in the battles of power and control that typically mark domestic violence. Animal abuse and neglect often indicate situations of elders needing assistance. We call the areas where child maltreatment, domestic violence, elder abuse and animal cruelty intersect "The Link."
Violence against animals and violence against people are not distinct and separate problems. Rather, they are part of a larger paterrn of violent crimes that often co-exist. Research shows a significant correlation between animal cruelty and domestic violence, the physical and sexual abuse of childrenm sexual assualt and other violent crimes. This relationship between violence against animals and people is commonly known as the violence link, and it emcompasses a range of prevention and intervention practices that aim to reduce vulnerability in animals and human beings.
What is the link?
Accumulating evidence is demonstrating strong links between animal cruelty and other crimes, including interpersonal, family and community violence. Researchers have learned:
• Children's witnessing or participation in animal cruelty is a significant marker for their developing aggressive and anti-social behavior and a predictor of future domestic violence.
• Batterers often kill and abuse pets to orchestrate fear, violence and retribution in homes marked by domestic violence.
• Severe animal neglect in the form of hoarding often indicates elders needing social services or mental health assistance.
This booklet was designed to provide women with strategies to increase their safety.
Whether you are living in an abusive relationship, thinking about leaving an abusive relationship, or have already left an abusive relationship, there are a number of ways in which you can increase your safety and that of your children.
Whenever the potential for violence is identified in a woman's life, it is important to develop a safety plan. Creating a safety plan involves identifying action steps to increase safety, and to prepare in advance for the possibility of further violence.
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The impact of low socio-economic status on infant and maternal health is well documented, both in the research and in anecdotal reports from service providers. Low socio-economic status is associated with low birth weight and other complications prior to and following delivery. The use of hospital days for the treat- ment of pregnancy-related complications is nearly four times greater for women in the lowest versus women in the highest income group (Mustard et al, 1995). However, the ramifications for pregnant women and their children who live in poverty extend beyond birth weight issues and include a range of health concerns, in addition to social and psychological impacts.
This thesis uses semi-structured interviews and qualitative analysis to examine the experiences of nine street-based sex workers in Ottawa, paying particular attention to experiences after the introduction of the new law. Drawing on the work of Mead & Blumer's symbolic interactionism theory and Goffman's concept of stigma the thesis examines how embedded stereotypes in legislation 'play out' in the lives of sex workers.
[D]ifferent approaches on prostitution will evidently have different effects on the women involved in prostitution. Thus this research carries out a comparative analysis of two countries – Canada and the Netherlands focusing on cases with different legislations on prostitution. Through this comparison I will answer my research question of "which regulatory approach to prostitution should Canada adopt in order to fully protect sex- workers' rights". Canada and the Netherlands differ greatly on their regulatory regimes relative to prostitution and both countries have pros and cons.


