Yes, there are, for sure. There's the Canadian Alliance for Sex Work Law Reform matter. The Attorney General of Canada is responding to that. I didn't get to the next part of my data, if you'd like to hear about that. The studies that I referred to focus on individuals who identify as sex workers. Others who have been involved in the sex trade may not identify that way. Those groups tend to be harder to reach. We don't know as much about people who are coerced into providing sexual services or people who have exited.
In my remarks I noted that the Juristat and the available jurisprudence indicate that the sex trade is a gendered practice, and that profiteers and procurers take advantage of women's and girls' vulnerability for their own gain. I can provide some highlights of the data reported in the Juristat, but I would note for the committee that of course Statistics Canada is better placed to provide detailed information on its own data.