It’s Time: Canada’s Strategy to Prevent and Address Gender-Based Violence

Publication date: June 2017

Gender-based violence (GBV) is a preventable and significant barrier to gender equality. Across the country, work is already underway to help change the norms, attitudes, and behaviours that contribute to GBV. The Government of Canada is building on these efforts with It’s Time: Canada’s Strategy to Prevent and Address Gender-Based Violence (Strategy). 

As part of the $100.9 million announced in Budget 2017, the Gender-Based Violence Knowledge Centre will be created within Status of Women Canada. New funding will also support key initiatives with the Public Health Agency of Canada, Public Safety Canada, the Department of National Defence, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada.

This whole-of-government approach is supported by other related government actions from Budget 2017 that will also contribute to the Strategy’s goals, including the National Housing Strategy, the Homelessness Partnering Strategy and Urban Programming for Indigenous Peoples. It will also build on actions announced in Budget 2016 (see Recent federal actions).

The Strategy is based on the following three pillars:

1. Prevention

Prevention is critical to ending violence. The Government of Canada will:

2. Support for survivors and their families

Funding is needed to improve supports for survivors as well as service providers to better meet the diverse needs of specific populations who have experienced GBV. The Government of Canada will:

Trauma-informed approaches are those that take into account the lasting effects that trauma – including violence – has on survivors. These approaches modify information, resources, and services to avoid re-traumatizing them.

Culturally safe approaches recognize and challenge unequal power relations between service providers and survivors by building equitable, two-way relationships characterized by respect, shared responsibility, and cultural exchange. Survivors must have their culture, values, and preferences taken into account in the provision of services.

3. Promoting responsive legal and justice systems

There must be improvements to the ways in which the legal and justice systems respond to GBV. To help reduce the incidence of GBV and increase survivors’ confidence in these systems, it is important to take the needs and experiences of survivors into account. The Government of Canada will:

Dedicated action to prevent and address GBV against Indigenous populations

In the spirit of reconciliation, the Strategy puts forward a range of actions to specifically address violence against Indigenous women and girls, including:

While the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls is underway, the federal government will continue to invest in a range of immediate actions to fill gaps and better support Indigenous Peoples and families.

Foundation for change

To coordinate actions under the three pillars, the Government of Canada will establish the Gender-Based Violence Knowledge Centre within Status of Women Canada as the focal point of the Strategy. The Knowledge Centre will:

Only by working together will we succeed in addressing GBV in Canada. This Strategy offers a roadmap for federal actions on prevention, support for survivors and their families, and promoting more responsive legal and justice systems. Through these actions, the Strategy will build on the work already underway, and ultimately help set the foundation for change—because it’s time.

Alternate format

The PDF version of this page is available on the Government of Canada Publications website: It's time : Canada's strategy to prevent and address gender-based violence.

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