No name released
Chloé Lauzon Rivard
Tannis Corrigal
Maria Medeiros
No name released
No name released
No name released
No name released
Madisyn Denea
No name released
Narjess Ben Yedder
Tanya Wiebe
No name released
Rommelia Ascuncion
Morgyn Rose Ascuncion-Massicotte
No name released
Amanda Clearwater
Bethany Manoakeesick
Isabella Manoakeesick
Myah-Lee Gratton
Lorraine Marsolais
Renee Marie Laroque
Elisabetta Caucci-Puglisi
Manon Blanchard
No name released
Chelsea Davidenas
Hayette Bouguellid
Navdeep Kaur
Estella Wheeler
Nariman Abdul Alghafour
Pawitarpreet Kaur Sidhu
Sheri Sabattis
Jo-Anne Patry
No name released
Darshani Dilanthika Ekanayake
Ashwini Wickramasinghe
Ranaya Wickramasinghe
Kelly Wickramasinghe
Danielle Dobersheck
No name released
Julia MacIsaac
Balwinder Kaur
No name released
Joanne Bender
No name released
Celine-Marie Owens
Louise Houle
No name released
Jennifer Polak
Sharon Brown
Gertrude Cheong
Vanessa Terry
Josianne Faucher
Tatjana Stefanski
Melissa Duquette
Manpreet Kaur
Brianna Hayes
Suzanne Fortin
No name released
Cathy Prosje
Alisseaha Golar-Kotlar
Jo-Ann Jackson
Carly Walsh
Madison Walsh
No name released
Thi Trang Do
Jennifer Allen
Marie-Claude Raymond
Beverly Constant
No name released
Dona Sajan
Makayla Zanae Roxburgh-Carpino
No name released
Amanda Caza
No name released
Rachel Muswagon
Naima Rezzek
Rihab El-Mahdi
Shannan Leigh Hickey
Brenda Toulejour
Irina Draghicescu
Xavia Skye Lynn Butler
Louise Thompson
Milka Spanovic
Jessica Lynn St. Jules
Judith Organ
Deborah Owen
Tori Dunn
No name released
Samira Yousefi
No name released
Linda Salagan
Christina Tina Louise Mackenzie
Barbara Church
Yuk-Ying (Anita) Mui
Éve Chachai
No name released
Cheryl Sheldon
Nora Jean Sumner
Threna Waskahat
No name released
Victoria Dill
No name released
Ashley Isabella Murdock
No name released
Jean McCalla
Margoth Arriaza
Andrieana Montgomery
Julia Brandy
Breanna Broadfoot
Bran Abed
Jaeden Chaisson
Jordan Leinen
No name released
Christine Rogers
Teresa Poirier
Shaylene Johnson Paul
Sarah Prehay
Ying Zhang
Keilia Windigo
Laurie Crew
Katrina Zwolinski
Trinh Thi Vu
Léonor Geraudie
Vérane Reynaud Geraudie
No name released
Terrance Tony-Kishayinew
No name released
No name released
Amber Dawn Robson
Jennifer Zabarylo
No name released
Aylissa Rovere
No name released
No name released
Zenada Gula
Jelena Domjanic
No name released
Vanessa Valencia
Xioamei Wang
Kelsey Watt
Lucy Wood
Amanda Keewatin
No name released
Dushi Lakshmanan
No name released
Delina Pinksy
Kassidy Ballantyne-Holmes
No name released
Kelly (Keleana) Trask
Brenda Tatlock-Burke
Khadija Charmant
Brkti Berhe
Baby girl
Emily Smoke
No name released
Briannah Clowes
No name released
No name released
Lindsay Danchella
Guangmei Ye
Raven Crate
Jordanna ‘Jo Jo’ Kucher
Parween Adel
Roshnee Gurung
No name released
No name released
Sheila Hercules
No name released
Breanna George
No name released
Alisha Brooks
(as of December 10, 2024)
It’s not passion. It's control.
It’s not rough sex. It's rape.
It’s not honour. It's violence against women and girls.
It's not only homicide. It’s femicide.
No woman or girl deserved it, but society allows it.
Honouring the Past, Advocating Change for the Future
What is Femicide?
The definitions vary across disciplines and world regions, but it broadly captures the killings of women and girls because of their sex or gender.
Remember Me
Beginning in 2018, the Canadian Femicide Observatory for Justice and Accountability remembers all women and girls in Canada killed by violence.
Our Research
Femicide prevention requires research which can continue to inform how society responds to male violence against women and girls.
Femicide and the Law
Learn from international and national research examining law’s response to femicide, including innovative legislation and policies.
Femicide and the Media
Learn from international and national research examining how media can be used for the primary prevention of femicide.
Femicide Prevention
Understand what it means to say that femicide is a public health issue because no single factor is responsible for femicide.
172
Women and Girls Killed
By Violence in 2024
Femicide is Preventable
Femicide is increasingly recognized as a global, widespread, and persistent human rights’ violation.
The way in which nation states or governments respond to femicide has become the focus of international attention because no country is free from this type of violence.
And Canada is no exception.
The Canadian Femicide Observatory for Justice and Accountability (CFOJA) was established in response to a call for action from the United Nations Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and consequences for countries to document sex/gender-related killings of women by collecting, analyzing, and reviewing data on femicides with the aim of prevention.
In Canada, we know that:
- One woman or girl is killed every other day, on average, somewhere in our country, mostly by men.
- A woman is killed by her male partner, on average, once a week.
- Some groups of women and girls are disproportionately impacted by femicide, depending on where they live in Canada, or because of their race, religion, sexuality, ability, and/or age.
Various other forms of discrimination and oppression such as poverty and/or housing precarity increase the marginalization of women and girls by society and, in turn, their vulnerability to violence, including femicide, in various contexts.
Women’s experiences of oppression and inequalities as well as outdated and negative attitudes, beliefs, and stereotypes about gender norms and violence perpetrated against them help to perpetuate and maintain practices that are harmful to women and girls.
The overarching goal of the CFOJA is to establish a visible and national focus on femicide in Canada and globally. While not all killings of women and girls are femicide, most of them are as demonstrated by the presence of sex- or gender-related motives and indicators.
In addition to ensuring their killings are counted and remembering all women and girls who are killed by violence, the CFOJA examines patterns in femicide over time, seeks to better identify factors indicative of femicide, and conducts research on social and legal responses to femicide, primarily represented by the media and the criminal justice system, respectively.
By confronting stereotypes and biases about violence against women and girls, including femicide, our goal is to empower girls and young women and promote their sex/gender equality overall.