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- Suppose one accepts MacKinnon and Dworkin's suggested
- statutory definition of pornography. How does one who
- generally accepts MacKinnon and Dworkin's views on the
- pervasively harmful effect of pornography, and who accepts a need
- for legal redress of the harms perpetrated by pornography, deal
- with pornographic material?
- The ordinance proposed by MacKinnon and Dworkin would deal
- with such material by enacting legislation which gives people
- adversely affected by the works, which clearly fit their
- definition of pornography, a cause of action against the
- producers, vendors, exhibitors or distributors for
- "trafficking", or for an assault "directly caused by the
- specific work.
- I do not think liberals, or others for that matter, should
- have much problem with the clause dealing with assault, since a
- causal connection to specific works is demanded by it. However,
- s. 3.2(iii) which deals with trafficking would be very
- problematic for liberals and legal conservatives because it
- creates a cause of action for a person contrary to the
- traditional conception of a rights holder's cause of action.
- This subsection reads:
- Any woman has a claim hereunder as a woman acting
- against the subordination of women. Any man, child or
- transsexual who alleges injury by pornography in the
- way women are injured by it also has a claim.
- [emphasis added]
-
- My goal in this paper is to suggest that a slight
- modification to this subsection of the ordinance would make it
- very difficult for liberals and legal conservatives to object to
- it. This modification would restrict the cause of action to the
- same persons as the other sections of the ordinance, namely, the
- particular victim of the specified injury. I shall argue that
- such a modification would largely cohere with the conception of
- harm already at work in Ontario law, would afford only a minor
- reduction in the potential efficacy of such legislation in
- curbing the harm of pornography, and would offer to empower the
- feminist camp which is behind such an ordinance with a mechanism
- for social and political change if a sufficiently organized
- feminist "vanguard" took hold of the opportunity to empower
- women.
- Adrian Howe argues that the concept of social injury which
- may be suggested by the ordinance recognizes the differential
- harm felt by women from pornography. Howe suggests this social
- notion of harm may be a necessary feature of any successful law
- reform which is to address the huge social problem of male
- domination and female oppression. The liberal notion of an
- individuated human right fails to capture, for MacKinnon and
- Howe, "the specificity of the harm to women." Thus, an
- ordinance which did not create a cause of action "for women as
- women" would fail to address the root of the social problem of
- which pornography is a manifestation.
- This conception of social harm, and thus subsection
- 3.2(iii), may offend liberals or legal conservatives in two ways.
- First, the notion of non-individuated harm is antithetical to the
- liberal conception of a rights holder claiming a cause of action.
- Fundamental to a liberal conception of harm is the notion of the
- individual who is autonomous, separate and fundamentally worthy
- of respect. Rawls and Kant exemplify this view in their analyses
- when they posit the undifferentiated self, free of any particular
- qualities save that of being an agent worthy of a fundamental,
- inviolable respect. This notion of the individual worthy of
- equal concern and respect in the eyes of the state permeates
- liberal conceptions of rights. It is also a fundamental, if not
- exclusive, tenet of the common law of torts:
- In tort litigation, the courts must decide whether to
- shift the loss suffered by one person, the plaintiff,
- to the shoulders of another person [emphasis added].
-
- Clearly, on its face this conception of harm precludes the
- notion of a harm suffered collectively which cannot be delineated
- individually. While class actions are possible, and claims may
- be made on behalf of groups such as company shareholders, this is
- only by virtue of the fact that a legally recognized individual
- has suffered an identifiable particular harm.
- Thus, the conventional liberal notion of harm is radically
- distinct from that outlined by Howe and MacKinnon. Since on the
- liberal conception rights holders are autonomous, individual
- selves who are essentially distinct, harm to one is distinct from
- harm to another. It may be that a liberal conception of a rights
- holder simply renders the concept of a social harm, and thus a
- cause of action "for women as women" incoherent. I do not wish
- to discuss whether it is possible to develop a complete liberal
- notion of social harm. It is sufficient to note that the notion
- of harm to rights holders inherent in the dominant liberal legal
- discourse appears to preclude a cause of action by any individual
- simply by virtue of their membership in an oppressed social
- class.
- The problem for feminism is that the offence of trafficking
- in pornography, if the cause of action were limited to
- individuals who allege a direct harm stemming from this
- trafficking, may seldom if ever deliver a remedy. Consider the
- immense burden for a successful action:
- She must first prove that the relevant materials are
- pornography. They must be sexually explicit and they
- must contain one or more of the features listed in the
- definition. Second, she must prove that the materials
- sexually subordinated her. The materials have to be
- more than just offensive; this is not a law that
- worries about offending sensibilities, it is concerned
- with injuries to women. These injuries must be proven
- in court. Only then will the plaintiff be awarded
- damages or an injunction against the materials in
- question [emphasis added].
- The harm which a particular woman suffers as a result of
- trafficking in pornography is not easily delineated. It is not
- the physical assault or forced viewing outlined in the other
- sections of the ordinance. Nor is it (for MacKinnon/Cole
- proponents) a tangible physical harm in the "John hits Mary"
- sense:
- [P]ornography causes attitudes and behaviours of
- violence and discrimination that define the treatment
- and status of half the population .
-
- [P]ornography institutionalizes the sexuality of male
- supremacy ...
- Since the harm caused by pornography is a social, collective
- harm to women, conventional liberal notions of tortious harm are
- seemingly unable to capture its seriousness (no single woman
- appears to have been grievously harmed). Thus, to limit the
- cause of action in the ordinance's trafficking provision to
- particular, individual women might seem futile for feminists in
- that a traditional liberal court would be unable to make sense of
- the claims of harm involved.
- The situation may not be quite so bleak. It will be useful
- to examine the notion of a social harm, a harm which cannot be
- tied directly to one victim, in the areas of criminal and tort
- law. I suggest that Ontario courts already have the basis for a
- framework of social harm in the federal statutory provisions on
- hate literature, and in the principles which can be adopted from
- the Bhadauria case.
- The Criminal Code in sections 318 and 319 prohibits the
- advocating or promoting of genocide and the incitement of hatred
- of identifiable groups respectively. It is noteworthy that
- "identifiable group" is defined as "any section of the public
- distinguished by colour, race, religion or ethnic origin", but
- does not include gender identification. These sections allow
- groups, rather than individuals, to seek redress for the
- dissemination of hateful or pro-genocidal material. Section 319
- has been found to violate s.2(b) of the Charter of Rights and
- Freedoms, but to be justified under s.1 of the Charter.
- Thus, it is considered to be coherent in Canadian criminal law
- for a somewhat intangible social harm to have been suffered by a
- group through the publication of literature, and for a remedy to
- be appropriate.
- There are problems with this kind of legal protection from
- social harm if MacKinnon and Cole's assumptions about the legal
- system are accepted. The sections may take effect only on the
- initiative of the Attorney General; it is this feature which led
- to charges against Ernst Zundel [for the publication of
- literature denying the holocaust and claiming the existence of a
- Zionist conspiracy] being laid by Jewish activist groups under
- s.181 of the Code. Thus, Cole's claim that legal redress for
- the harm of pornography will not be effectively obtained through
- reliance on intervention by a male-dominated executive branch of
- government is supported by the failure of another
- identifiable victim group to have charges laid by the Attorney
- General in what appeared to many to be a clear case. In isolated
- cases like Keegstra, where children were the group to whom
- hateful information was being disseminated, the law recognizes
- social harms as actionable. It is clear though that the
- pragmatic barriers to criminal prosecutions for the harm
- pornography causes to women, as opposed to society's moral
- intolerance of the offensive content, are immense in a male
- dominated liberal society.
- What should not be lost in this pragmatic pessimism is the
- adequacy of the conceptual foundation of a social harm which
- arose in Keegstra. In this case, the social harm was seen
- not only to affect the "targets" of the information, in this case
- Jews, but to adversely affect "society at large". Furthermore,
- the type of harm caused to the target group is similar to that
- seen by feminists as suffered by women due to pornography:
- Disquiet caused by the existence of such material is
- not simply the product of its offensiveness, however,
- but stems from the very real harm which it causes.
-
- [E]motional damage caused by words may be of grave
- psychological and social consequence. [They] can
- constitute a serious attack on persons belonging to a
- racial or religious group, and in this regard the Cohen
- Committee noted that these persons are humiliated and
- degraded (p. 214).
-
- Referring then to a prominent liberal theorist, Dickson C.J.
-
- said:
-
- In my opinion, a response of humiliation and
- degradation from an individual targeted by hate
- propaganda is to be expected. A person's sense of
- human dignity and belonging to the community at large
- is closely linked to the concern and respect accorded
- the groups to which he or she belongs (see Isaiah
- Berlin, "Two Concepts of Liberty", in Four Essays on
- Liberty (1969), p. 118, at p. 155).
-
- Let us call the harm to a particular woman which is suffered
- as a result of trafficking in pornography a quasi-social harm.
- It is distinguished from a social harm in that the victim
- conceived as a member of a victimized class, but any action to
- redress this harm is brought solely on her own behalf for the
- harm personally suffered. Unlike the actions in the criminal
- cases previously cited, claims here are not on behalf of a group
- or on behalf of society as a whole, but are on behalf of an
- individual who has suffered as a member of a class. The modified
- ordinance I propose seeks to redress quasi-social harms. One may
- question whether this (as distinct from addressing social harm)
- is a tenable legal proposition or not. I suggest that it is, at
- least in Ontario, given our established legal categories and
- means of redress.
- The Ontario Human Rights Code provides an example of an
- attempt to redress quasi-social harms. It may be true that tort
- law is unable to address the "social injury that occurs at a
- personal level", but this is exactly the kind of injury the
- human rights codes of the country have been enacted to redress.
- While couched in the terminology of individual human rights, the
- OHRC's categories of protection indicate a necessary connection
- to the notion of a social harm.
- The OHRC does not promise equality, equal treatment, equal
- respect etc. of every person, its grandiose preamble
- notwithstanding. What it promises is that injurious
- discrimination to individuals due to membership in certain social
- categories will be redressed by damages or injunction. These
- social categories are those which are traditionally associated
- with social injury - race, ancestry, place of origin, colour,
- ethnic origin, citizenship, creed, sex, sexual orientation, age,
- marital or family status, or handicap. Notice that many
- categories are absent - foolhardiness, poverty, language group,
- education, etc. What this indicates is that the OHRC does not
- address an equality right per se, but addresses social harm as a
- result of being eg. black, female, Croatian, gay, blind, 25 yr.
- old, unmarried, etc. The remedies under s.40 of the OHRC are
- nearly identical to those in the modified ordinance - damages,
- including those for personal anguish, costs of the action, and
- injunction.
- The modified ordinance would thus be quite similar to the
- existing human rights legislation in Ontario in its recognition
- of social harm and its suggestion of remedies. Where it would
- differ is in its refusal to supplant the power of the victim to
- pursue their own action in court, rather than deal with a
- commission (and its discretionary powers) or board of inquiry to
- investigate matters. Thus the modified ordinance would
- remain "women-initiated and women-driven." It would also
- differ from the OHRC in that it would clearly specify an as yet
- unrecognized particular method of inflicting harm: trafficking
- in pornography.
- One well-known attempt to pursue a remedy for a quasi-social
- harm outside the administrative realm of the OHRC succeeded in
- the Ontario Court of Appeal, but failed at the Supreme Court of
- Canada. In Bhadauria, the plaintiff alleged that she had been
- discriminated against because of her race in applying for a
- teaching position, and brought an action on a common law tort
- basis of discrimination, and also cited a violation of the OHRC
- as giving a cause of action.
- Wilson J. in the Court of Appeal held that it was open to
- the court to allow the expansion of the common law to include the
- tort of discrimination, and would have allowed the action to
- proceed. The question of whether the OHRC gave rise to an
- independent civil action was not entertained given this
- finding.
- Laskin CJ. in the Supreme Court of Canada said that the OHRC
- was meant to supplant the attempt to seek a remedy at common law,
- not to supplement it, and thus barred the action from proceeding
- either at common law or directly from an alleged breach of the
- OHRC since Bhadauria had not attempted to invoke the procedures
- of the OHRC for redress. What is noteworthy from this case
- is that the question of whether this kind of harm was capable of
- judicial consideration was never at issue. For the Court of
- Appeal, the common law was fully capable of entertaining such a
- harm as a tort. For the Supreme Court, the OHRC was seen as the
- appropriate means of redressing such harm.
- What the examples from criminal and tort law demonstrate is
- that the notion of a quasi-social harm is tenable in our legal
- system, particularly if individuals are given a statutory right
- to pursue remedies for it. Thus, the modified ordinance would
- simply indicate to the court a category of social harm which has
- not previously been specifically addressed, the harm to women
- from the propagation of pornography. The relative success at
- achieving remedies from OHRC provisions, as compared to the
- reluctance of the government to permit the exercise of the
- Criminal Code provisions, indicates that retaining a civil right
- of action for individuals will be the strategically better move
- for feminists insofar as they are seeking redress. I shall leave
- discussion of whether this is a tenable feminist political
- strategy for dealing with pornography for a later part of the
- paper.
- It may be objected that the fact that our legal tradition is
- capable of making sense of the notion of a quasi-social harm, and
- thus could provide the judiciary with the conceptual tools to
- adjudicate on a modified version of the ordinance, does not imply
- that the modified ordinance and its conception of harm is
- acceptable in a liberal framework. A liberal framework may
- demand individuated harms, and the fact that our existing legal
- framework can work outside that limitation simply demonstrates
- that liberalism is not at the root of our legal framework's
- evolving notion of harm. Thus, the ordinance may still be seen
- by liberals as incoherent, or worse, to invoke an illegitimate
- conception of non-individuated rights and afford state enforced
- remedies for illegitimate purposes.
- This liberal argument may be theoretically tenable, and thus
- the "bleak" picture I painted may still apply insofar as we
- favour a liberal legal framework. Furthermore, the powerful
- liberal arguments concerning freedom of speech may override the
- concern for the kind of harm contained in the ordinance. Perhaps
- because the alleged harm has not been demonstrably linked to the
- propagation of pornography, or is not a harm in the liberal
- sense, but an expression of a preference, a liberal framework
- could not permit the ordinance since it is an undue restriction
- on free expression.
- My response to this is twofold. First, given that
- protection from harm is generally an acceptable justification for
- a restriction on liberty in a liberal framework, it is up to
- liberals to deliver a coherent rebuttal to MacKinnon et al.'s
- contention that pornography causes genuine physical and
- psychological harm to women, rather than just revulsion. To date
- I have not seen a liberal rebuttal which did not make the
- assumption that the root of the problem of pornography is simply
- moral offence, i.e. strongly held preferences against the
- propagation of pornography. I find the feminist claims about
- harm to be very persuasive, and until they are addressed by
- liberals in terms of a rebuttal of the harm, rather than by
- reference to the moral disvalue of pornography, the onus should
- rest on them.
- Second, the ordinance is not an attempt to arrive at a
- coherent theoretical position on pornography, but is an attempt
- to solve a social problem through the mechanism of law. If the
- attempt of the existing legal system to redress such problems is
- illegitimate simply on abstract liberal grounds, it need not be a
- fundamental practical concern of feminists to convince liberals
- that the ordinance is acceptable. From the feminist strategic
- perspective, it is enough to show, as I am attempting, that some
- form of the ordinance coheres well with the existing legal
- tradition whether that tradition is fundamentally liberal or
- otherwise. The problem of theoretical legitimacy of the legal
- system as a whole need not be of particular concern for
- proponents of the ordinance; what is important is redressing the
- harms done to women by the political and legal means at hand.
- Moreover, I am not convinced, given the comments of Dickson J.
- above, that liberal theories are committed to abandoning the
- notion of harm and the means of redress which we see in the
- existing legal framework. Perhaps then only certain categories
- of liberalism would take objection with the notion of harm
- addressed in Keegstra or the OHRC.
- The second major problem with the ordinance for our
- traditional liberal legal framework is the identification of the
- source of the harm. The liberal conception of autonomous
- individuals requires a particular victim and a particular
- perpetrator. MacKinnon and Cole extensively consider the notion
- of women as victims of a social harm, but give little
- consideration to the notion of the perpetrators of this harm
- beyond the simple definition of pornography. For them, it
- would seem that if we can identify pornography, we can identify
- the source of the harm. Clearly, identification of the
- perpetrators is required before an action for redress can be
- launched under the ordinance. Even though this is not a
- theoretical requirement of every system of redress for harm,
- it is both a theoretical and pragmatic requirement for launching
- a civil action. The frameworks of criminal law, tort law and the
- OHRC all presume an identifiable perpetrator of a harm can be
- identified. Even if it were not a legal requirement for a
- determination of entitlement to a remedy that one be capable of
- identifying the perpetrator, it would be rather pointless to
- launch an action for damages or injunction if there were no
- identifiable legal person from whom to collect or upon whom the
- injunction would act.
- The harm from pornography is not easily traced to a single
- source. MacKinnon et al. go to great lengths to point out the
- complexity of the problem of pornography, that harm ensues not
- just because of what the content of pornography is, but because
- of how the messages of pornography contribute to the social
- fabric of male hegemony. "Pornography institutionalizes the
- sexuality of male supremacy." If, as has been argued,
- pornography's harm is intimately connected to social practices,
- then perhaps blame for this harm cannot be pinpointed to
- pornography alone, or any particular source of pornography. It
- is beyond the scope of this paper to attempt an analysis of
- society which could offer insight into the distribution of
- responsibility for reparation of the harm of pornography across
- all members and institutions in society. Instead I shall
- attempt to offer insight into the smaller problem of distribution
- of responsibility among pornographers. Given the huge volume of
- pornography, in many cases it may be impossible to pinpoint the
- particular publishers, materials etc. which led to the quasi-
- social harm against a plaintiff. I suggest that a solution to
- the problem of perpetrator identity may be suggested by analysis
- of the California Supreme Court's treatment of the problem in a
- product liability case.
- The excerpt from Linden above indicates that
- traditionally the perpetrator of a tort must be clearly,
- individually identified as the cause of the harm suffered by the
- plaintiff. This traditional concept of causation in tort law is
- not sacrosanct. In Sindell, an action launched by a victim of a
- harmful drug succeeded against a multitude of pharmaceutical
- companies even though no one company could be causally linked to
- the harm suffered by the particular victim.
- The plaintiff's mother had consumed the drug DES during her
- pregnancy, and the plaintiff suffered birth defects as a result.
- Evidence of the particular supplier of this drug to her mother
- had long since vanished, but it was certain that some
- manufacturer out of a number producing it at the time of the
- pregnancy had promoted the drug without warning of the potential
- side effects. The California Supreme Court held that, in the
- absence of direct causal links to any particular supplier of the
- drug DES, the plaintiff could recover damages in proportion to
- the likelihood that any manufacturer was the one which provided
- the drug to her mother during pregnancy.
- This case has many obvious differences from a purported
- action for harm from trafficking in pornography. It was certain
- that the plaintiff had suffered a tangible physical harm from the
- product; the only question was whether manufacturer A, B, C etc.
- had been the perpetrator. What is interesting about the case for
- proponents of a modified ordinance is that if a woman could
- demonstrate to the court a harm from the propagation of
- pornography in general, this case would indicate that all
- pornographers or traffickers might be held liable in proportion
- to some measure of their market share. Of note is the fact that
- only "the producers of a substantial share of the market, that
- is, over 50 per cent" needed to be sued to invoke this
- "market share" liability notion. Thus, if a woman could
- demonstrate the relevant quasi-social harm from pornography, and
- name producers of at least 50% of the market share of the
- relevant material, she would meet the threshold for bringing an
- action. Of course, if a particular trafficker could show that
- theirs was not a harmful brand of pornography (or more
- accurately, was not harmful, and thus was not pornography), they
- would be immune from the action.
- One problem with this scheme is limiting the named
- defendants to those who produce an identifiable kind of
- pornography. I am not confident that in all or even most cases a
- woman would be able to identify any particular kind of
- pornography as that which caused the harm she experienced. This
- is again due to the complex social nature of the harm, its
- difficulty to pinpoint. There is a danger that an implausible or
- untenable number of publishers or traffickers of other sorts
- would be named in any given lawsuit. Furthermore, publishers
- might begin a "third party" frenzy in an attempt to draw in
- others to distribute the costs of the suit. However, it seems
- plausible in at least some cases that a particular class of
- material could be identified as the cause of the harm, and
- since (as I shall soon argue) the importance to feminists of the
- ordinance is not just its success at compensating particular
- women, but its political and social effects, if some cases
- succeed it will be a great victory.
- Thus, the problem of identification of a perpetrator is not
- insurmountable. There is at least some jurisprudence which would
- give judges the tools to offer redress where individual
- perpetrators cannot be identified. In particular cases there may
- simply be single or multiple defendants, or there may be an
- identifiable class of defendant where the particular perpetrators
- are unknowable. In either case, the Ontario courts have
- available to them the conceptual tools to deal with the matter.
- The addition of the indeterminate perpetrators doctrine from
- the DES case would be a welcome addition to the judicial
- treatment of a modified ordinance, but successful actions would
- not depend on it. It is not impossible to imagine the kind of
- material that would be claimed to be harmful - it would
- contain pictures or words where women in a sexual context are
- dehumanized, objectified, shown as enjoying pain, rape or
- humiliation, bruised, bleeding or hurt, etc. Once the
- identification of harmful material is accomplished, the
- publishers, distributors, etc. need to be identified and named.
- Then the major problem for a woman to overcome as plaintiff under
- s.3.2(iii) is to demonstrate that some genuine quasi-social harm
- to her came about from the propagation of pornography, although
- she was not assaulted or forced to view or participate in it. As
- the Ruth M. testimony indicates, this is not entirely implausible.
- To sum thus far, a modified version of the ordinance would
- give individual women a cause of action for quasi-social harms
- they have suffered as a result of trafficking in pornography.
- While the hate literature provisions of the criminal code suggest
- that our legal framework can deal with the notion of social harm,
- greater success can be expected if the modification is adopted.
- This modification would bring the feminist notion of harm
- suggested by MacKinnon and her proponents within a legal
- framework not unlike some of the existing legal schema in Ontario
- which give civil remedies for quasi-social harms. The problem of
- specifying a perpetrator, while great, is not insurmountable
- given the doctrine in Sindell and the accepted notion of multiple
- defendants in civil suits. Finally, though the ordinance may at
- first seem unworkable (as any new legal doctrine does until it
- has had judicial treatment), there are genuine fact situations in
- which redress seems just and plausible.
- I have mentioned feminist strategy in various contexts in
- this paper. Of course there is debate within feminist circles
- over the appropriate strategies for dealing with the problem of
- pornography. The ordinance, modified or not, will not
- satisfy every feminist. I think it would be a tenable
- proposition for MacKinnon and her proponents not only in its
- provision of a remedy for particular social harms suffered by
- individual women, but because it will serve to expose the harm of
- pornography to great public scrutiny, provided feminists devote
- substantial political effort to particular cases.
- MacKinnon et al. are concerned that the ordinance should be
- a mechanism for changing the power relations sustained by
- pornography. Since the harm of pornography is in a sense held
- collectively, is social, and since the modified ordinance
- restricts the cause of action to a single plaintiff on her own
- behalf as a woman, the modified ordinance has arguably created a
- law which is unlikely to be pursued. This is because the women
- most likely to succeed are the least likely to proceed - they
- either will not possess sufficient power in their situation of
- subjugation, or they will not recognize the harm since for them
- it is normalized, adopted, accepted.
- It is probably true that the ordinance will not turn upside-
- down the subjugation of women simply by offering remedies to
- individual women. The harm of pornography to women is social;
- individual remedies will not change that. However, the existence
- of the ordinance, and the existence of women like Ruth M. and
- Linda Marchiano who somehow break out from the bonds of a
- pornographic existence mean that some cases will come to light.
- If proponents of MacKinnon's ordinance adopt a suitable strategic
- posture, the ordinance will be effective in meeting their aim of
- limiting the harmful effect of pornography on women.
- The task for feminists, I would suggest, is twofold. First,
- organization of support mechanisms is needed to give women the
- resources to come forward and challenge those who harm them
- through trafficking in pornography is needed. The role of
- support groups, groups to provide legal resources, groups to
- provide personal support in a situation where one's established
- values, relationships etc. are shaken apart, is crucial to the
- success of actions brought under the ordinance. Individual women
- would be truly exceptional to successfully bring forth an action
- on their own.
- Second, feminists must try to contain and confront political
- opposition to the modified ordinance which can be expected.
- There is little doubt in my mind that cases brought under this
- ordinance would bring about much publicity, just as Keegstra and
- Zundel did. Opponents will be quick to point out the
- "censorship" involved, the restriction on freedom of expression,
- and cry for the invocation of the Charter of Rights to thwart
- efforts at redressing the harm to women. Feminists must strive
- to bring the harm to the attention of the public, show the public
- what it is that pornography does, as well as show the community
- what it contains. The campaigns, the publicity in both lobbying
- for enactment of the ordinance, and pursuing actions under it
- will no doubt rally a significant segment of the community to
- support women in their quest for freedom from harm. While it
- will no doubt also create controversies, polarizations,
- opposition, etc. (much as the Thomas hearings recently did on the
- issue of harassment), the exposure of the issue will, I suggest,
- be strategically beneficial.
- To conclude, a version of the ordinance which is modified to
- restrict the cause of action for trafficking in pornography to
- individuals would be a tenable proposition. It would not be an
- extreme departure from our liberal legal tradition, but would
- afford redress for individuals who suffer quasi-social harms in a
- manner consistent with existing legislation on discrimination and
- hate literature. The problem of identifying perpetrators is
- difficult, but existing doctrine in the sphere of negligence law
- provides some insight into dealing with it. Furthermore, the
- feminist goal of a large scale change in the power imbalance
- perpetuated by pornography will at least be advanced, though not
- fully attained, by the ordinance. I suggest that such a modified
- ordinance should be given serious consideration by feminists and
- our legislators."Remedies for Pornography in the Ontario Legal Context"
-
- Term Paper for "Free Speech, Pornography and the Relationship
- Between Law and Morality"
- Prof. David Dyzenhaus
- University of Toronto Faculty of Law
- January 6, 1992
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