Sexual misconduct

Any form of sexual misconduct is unacceptable. It is inconsistent with the values and ethical principles of the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) and the Department of National Defence (DND). It harms its people and jeopardizes our operational effectiveness.

DND/CAF have taken important steps to prevent and address sexual misconduct but there is much more work to do. We have adopted a holistic, long-term approach that aims to eliminate all forms of improper conduct, discrimination, biases, harmful stereotypes, and systemic barriers across Defence. We continue to prioritize comprehensive support to affected persons in a way that meets individual needs. We are also focusing efforts on justice and accountability and culture evolution initiatives.

Sexual misconduct CAF sentiment

Most survey data on this page is from the 2022 Survey on Sexual Misconduct in the CAF (SSMCAF). This survey tracks the prevalence and nature of self-reported sexual misconduct within the military workplace and/or involving military members, Department of National Defence (DND) employees, or DND contractors within or outside the military workplace.

CAF Members

It is understood in my unit that sexual misconduct has no place in the CAF:

category subcategory Year % Agree % Other
Overall Overall 2022 96% 4%
Men Experienced sexualized or discriminatory behaviours 2022 93% 47%
Men Overall 2022 97% 3%
Men Victim of sexual assault 2022 84% 16%
Women Experienced sexualized or discriminatory behaviours 2022 87% 13%
Women Overall 2022 94% 6%
Women Victim of sexual assault 2022 84% 16%

People in my unit would encourage victims to report sexual misconduct:

category subcategory Year % Agree % Other
Overall Overall 2022 93% 7%
Men Experienced sexualized or discriminatory behaviours 2022 85% 15%
Men Overall 2022 93% 7%
Men Victim of sexual assault 2022 66% 34%
Women Experienced sexualized or discriminatory behaviours 2022 79% 21%
Women Overall 2022 89% 11%
Women Victim of sexual assault 2022 72% 28%

People in my unit would assist others in situations of sexual misconduct:

category subcategory Year % Agree % Other
Overall Overall 2022 91% 9%
Men Experienced sexualized or discriminatory behaviours 2022 83% 17%
Men Overall 2022 92% 8%
Men Victim of sexual assault 2022 67% 33%
Women Experienced sexualized or discriminatory behaviours 2022 75% 25%
Women Overall 2022 86% 14%
Women Victim of sexual assault 2022 69% 31%

People in my unit lead by example by not participating in sexist comments and behaviours:

category subcategory Year % Agree % Other
Overall Overall 2022 83% 17%
Men Experienced sexualized or discriminatory behaviours 2022 64% 36%
Men Overall 2022 84% 16%
Men Victim of sexual assault 2022 49% 51%
Women Experienced sexualized or discriminatory behaviours 2022 61% 39%
Women Overall 2022 79% 21%
Women Victim of sexual assault 2022 53% 47%

People in my unit recognize and immediately address incidents of sexual misconduct:

category subcategory Year % Agree % Other
Overall Overall 2022 83% 17%
Men Experienced sexualized or discriminatory behaviours 2022 67% 33%
Men Overall 2022 85% 15%
Men Victim of sexual assault 2022 48% 52%
Women Experienced sexualized or discriminatory behaviours 2022 56% 44%
Women Overall 2022 75% 25%
Women Victim of sexual assault 2022 49% 51%

Data Source: Survey on Sexual Misconduct in the Canadian Armed Forces (2022)

CAF sentiment towards the sexual misconduct reporting process

CAF Members

Consequences (men)

I did not report sexual assault as I was afraid of negative consequences (e.g., retaliation/revenge):

Year % Agree % Other
2022 33% 67%

Consequences (women)

I did not report sexual assault as I was afraid of negative consequences (e.g., retaliation/revenge):

Year % Agree % Other
2022 41% 59%

Data Source: Survey on Sexual Misconduct in the Canadian Armed Forces (2022)

Reprisal

I am confident that I would not be retaliated against if I reported incidents of sexual misconduct:

Year % Agree % Other
2021 46% 54%

Data Source: Your Say Survey: Programs & Policies (2021)

More information: Independent External Comprehensive Review

Context

In the spring of 2021, the Minister of National Defence engaged former Supreme Court Justice Louise Arbour to undertake an Independent External Comprehensive Review (IECR) of current policies, procedures, programs, practices, and culture within DND/CAF.

In 2022, the final IECR report was released, detailing the causes of the continued presence of sexual harassment and misconduct in the CAF, and providing 48 recommendations that seek to prevent and/or eradicate sexual harassment and misconduct in the CAF.

In December 2022, the Minister of National Defence released a Report to Parliament on Culture Change Reforms, in response to Madame Arbour’s report, announcing that she welcomed and agreed with all of the recommendations.

Recommendations from the IECR and other key external reports are incorporated in the Comprehensive Implementation Plan, which lays out a multi-year plan to deliver on culture change commitments and milestones aimed at making the DND/CAF more open, transparent, and accountable to our members and Canadians.

Data sources

For details on the methodology of data analysis, including descriptions of each data source, please visit the List of data sources page.

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