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Effective March 10, 2025: Due to significant funding cuts, SACE has paused all intakes for adult, child and youth, and group counselling.
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Wherever you are at in your relationship(s) or your life, you deserve to be safe and supported

It’s important to recognize that sexual assault is about power and control; people who hold identities that have less power or privilege in our society are often more targeted with this form of violence.

In keeping with this, the rate of sexual assault is higher in communities that experience marginalization, including queer and trans folks, Indigenous and racialized folks, and disabled folks. Statistics can be hard to source for queer and trans survivors of sexual assault, however, as the stats often don’t accurately reflect the complexities of people’s intersecting identities.

It’s also important to recognize that sexual and intimate partner violence within queer and trans relationships occurs at about the same rate as in cisgender heterosexual relationships, and that 2SLGBTQ+ experiences of sexual violence may be connected to other forms of violence or discrimination targeted at gender identity or sexual orientation.

You may feel…

If you are in an unhealthy relationship, involved with someone who is abusive, or have been sexually assaulted, you may feel:

Things you should know

How trauma works

Like the grass that sways and bends in a storm, queer and trans folks can have a lot of resilience to adapt to adversity.

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For help & more information

If you have experienced sexual violence, know that you are not alone: we see you, and supports are available.

SACE Office

SACE services information and intake.

Alberta's One Line

Call or text Alberta’s One Line for Sexual Violence from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily.

CHEW Project

2SLGBTQ+ mental, social, and sexual health support.

It’s not your fault

The only person responsible for sexual assault is the person who chooses to harm.

AB oneLine - Sexual Violence Against Queer and Trans Folks: Information for Support

Use the chat icon in the bottom right corner to chat with a support volunteer from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily or call or text: 1.866.403.8000

Definitions

The improper exposure of a child to any sexual contact, activity, or behaviour. This includes all sexual touching, the invitation to touch, exhibitionism, exposure to pornography.

Forcing another individual, through violence, threats (physical or emotional), pressure, deception, guilt, to engage in sexual activities against their will.

A voluntary agreement between 2 or more people to engage in sexual activity. Consent must be clear, informed, voluntary, sober, act and person-specific, ongoing, mutual, active, and come directly from the individuals engaging in the sexual contact. It is impossible to get consent from children, though close-in-age  and peer-experimentation exceptions exist for youth ages 12-15.

A society or environment in which obtaining consent and respecting boundaries is the norm, for both sexual contact and everyday activities.

The advocacy of women’s rights on the basis of the equality of the sexes.

An intersectional approach to service delivery that acknowledges that the root of sexual violence is power inequality and works to reduce barriers that groups and individuals face when seeking support and volunteer or employment opportunities.

When an intimate photo or video is shared or taken without the voluntary consent (read consent definition above) of the person in the photo or video (Source: savedmonton.com)

Person-first language recognizes that a person is more than any one experience and that labels are sometimes harmful. People who have experienced sexual violence may use terms like victim or survivor to describe themselves, or they may use words like offender or perpetrator to describe the person who harmed them. Terms that resonate for one person may not fit for another person for a variety of reasons, and SACE supports a person’s right to self-determine their identity and experience. This is why at SACE, we default to person-first language such as “person who experienced sexual assault”, or “person who used abusive behavior”, unless speaking with or about an individual who has identified how they would like their experience to be talked about.

A society or environment whose prevailing social attitudes have the effect of normalizing or trivializing sexual assault and abuse.

Sex trafficking is a form of sexual exploitation. Human trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation is a crime and Canada has specific legislation in the Criminal Code (S. 279) and in the IRPA (Immigrant and Refugee Protection Action) (S. 117 & 118) to address all types of human trafficking (sexual exploitation, labour exploitation, organ, debt servitude) There are three elements to constitute human trafficking: Action + Means + Purpose.

Sexual abuse is most often used to refer to Child Sexual Abuse. To learn more about this, read the definition above or our section on Child Sexual Abuse.

Any form of sexual contact without voluntary consent, including unwanted: oral contact (kissing); sexual touching; oral-genital contact; and/or vaginal or anal penetration. 

Any actual or attempted abuse of a position of vulnerability, differential power, or trust, for sexual purposes, including, but not limited to, profiting monetarily, socially or politically from the sexual exploitation of another.

Any unwanted comment, gesture, or action that is sexual in nature that makes someone feel afraid, embarrassed, uncomfortable or ashamed. The intention of the person doing the action doesn’t matter, it’s the negative impact the action has that makes something sexual harassment.

Sexual violence is an umbrella term that refers to any form of non-consensual sexual behavior, including sexual assault, sexual abuse, sexual harassment, sexual exploitation, sex trafficking, and sexual violence facilitated through technology.

Printable PDF

A print copy of “Sexual violence in 2SLGBTQ+ communities: Information for support” is available for download.

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