Tuesday, January 13, 2026
ADVT 
National

New military ad campaign to be aimed at women

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Sep, 2021 01:11 PM
  • New military ad campaign to be aimed at women

OTTAWA - An expert on sexual misconduct says it would be dishonest for the Department of National Defence to promote the military as a positive place for women to work in a coming campaign after widespread reports to the contrary.

The Canadian Armed Forces, which has long struggled to boost the number of women in its ranks, hopes to have them represent one-quarter of members by 2026.

That figure now sits at around 15 per cent, and an internal study suggests the department needs to recruit around 3,500 women each year to meet its goal.

While recruiting more women poses a challenge, the military has been rocked in the last year by public reports of sexual misconduct allegations, including against its most senior officials.

The complaints of widespread inappropriate behavior prompted Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to say it was clear military complainants didn't feel they had a place to report their experiences. He asked a former Supreme Court justice in April to investigate the issue, more than six years after an earlier report on the matter.

That same month, a consulting company delivered a report based on focus groups with women aged 18 to 35 to test advertisements ahead of a recruitment campaign set to roll out soon.

An executive summary of the report posted to a federal website details how participants were shown storyboards with different advertising concepts that looked into the lives of women in the air force, navy and army.

The images showed women travelling, mothers being able to strike a work-life balance with their families and opportunities to serve in non-traditional environments.

"I think they have to deal with a cultural issue before they can sort of make any claims in recruitment campaigns," said Megan MacKenzie, a chair in international law and human security at Simon Fraser University who studies sexual misconduct in the military.

"It's dishonest to recruit women into an institution at this point with such positive messaging when so many women and men who have experienced sexual misconduct are saying they don't feel safe in the institution."

The report includes summaries of the feedback participants gave about the ads they saw, including one where they saw the message as one of women being accepted in the military if they were lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or queer.

"Participants felt the ad did not address concerns about LGBTQ in the military, and to a few it seemed contradictory to what recent news headlines communicate about sexual abuse in the forces," it reads.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Can we reach herd immunity with COVID-19?

Can we reach herd immunity with COVID-19?
Herd immunity refers to having enough people within a community protected from a virus or pathogen, either through natural infection or vaccination, that transmission becomes unlikely.

Can we reach herd immunity with COVID-19?

Evacuation orders due to B.C. wildfires drop

Evacuation orders due to B.C. wildfires drop
The emergency operations centre for the central Okanagan says assessments of neighbourhoods directly affected by the 830-square-kilometre White Rock Lake fire along the western banks of Okanagan Lake should be complete by Thursday.

Evacuation orders due to B.C. wildfires drop

Surrey man, Shri Rampol, arrested for allegedly sexually assaulting a woman during a massage: Surrey RCMP

Surrey man, Shri Rampol, arrested for allegedly sexually assaulting a woman during a massage: Surrey RCMP
This investigation began in March 2021, when Surrey RCMP received a report alleging that a woman was sexually assaulted while receiving a massage at Shri Professional Massage, located at 1105-7360 137 Street.

Surrey man, Shri Rampol, arrested for allegedly sexually assaulting a woman during a massage: Surrey RCMP

Liberals highlight policy differences with Tories

Liberals highlight policy differences with Tories
The pledges come in a Liberal re-election platform with $78 billion in new spending, more than three times the direct new revenues promised over the next five years.

Liberals highlight policy differences with Tories

B.C. extends state of emergency due to wildfires

B.C. extends state of emergency due to wildfires
Mike Farnworth says the extension recognizes that the potential for significant wildfire activity persists even as cooler weather helps firefighting crews.

B.C. extends state of emergency due to wildfires

Charge stayed in 2009 worker's death in B.C.

Charge stayed in 2009 worker's death in B.C.
The B.C. Prosecution Service says in a statement it recently determined the available evidence no longer satisfies the charge assessment standard for a prosecution to continue.

Charge stayed in 2009 worker's death in B.C.