Sex Worker Rights Are Human Rights By Juhu Thukral, On The Issues Magazine
Posted on August 28, 2008, Printed on September 6, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/96875/

The idea of sex workers fighting for their human rights is a foreign concept
to most people, even those who identify politically as progressives or
feminists. Sex workers have lived on the margins of society through most of
human history, and despite the prevalence of this work all over the world,
sex workers are often treated as less than human, both in cultural attitudes
and public policy. In fact, it cannot be said enough: sex workers are people
-- friends, neighbors, family members, wage earners, and parents -- and they
deserve the same human rights as everyone else.

*What Human Rights?*

Feminists and advocates of all stripes have argued that they want to work
for the human rights of sex workers, often without an analysis of what human
rights for sex workers might look like.

While many people would agree that access to human rights includes the right
to be free from harm, to have access to health care and housing, and to seek
safe employment that pays a living wage, there is fierce debate as to what
any of this actually means. Some feminists argue that sex work is inherently
harmful and that the very act of trading sex for money is a violation of a
person's sanctity or dignity, and is, in and of itself, an act of violence.
For these feminists, the story ends there, even when sex workers all over
the world speak out, not to ask to be pulled out of sex work, but to demand
that their rights be protected as they work.

Others, like the Sex Workers Project, believe that a human rights framework
includes active participation of sex workers from different backgrounds and
experiences; efforts to combat violence, whether it is at the hands of
customers or of the police; advocate for public health programs that promote
the autonomy of sex workers, and work to empower sex workers so that they
can make the best choices for themselves and their families, assessing their
life circumstances as best as they can. These elements are key to any effort
to respect the human rights and health needs of sex workers; to properly
assist those who want to leave sex work for other work, and to protect the
rights and safety of those who continue in sex work.

Another key issue that gets less attention is the fight over the role of the
criminal justice system. Some feminists view prosecution and punishment
through the criminal justice system as the cornerstone for helping victims
of violence. Others view rule of law as one of many important keys toward
guaranteeing human rights, but argue that an excessive focus on the criminal
justice system is detrimental to many marginalized groups, including sex
workers, who have been victimized by the police. There are fundamental
clashes between the needs of a criminal justice prosecution, and the needs
of a human being who would most benefit from a rights-based approach.

*Feminists Line Up Differently on Law Revision*

These debates, often centered on agency and autonomy, might seem theoretical
and unimportant in the realm of people's daily lives. However, the debate
often plays itself out in concrete policy terms, especially around the issue
of human trafficking.

While human trafficking involves the experience of force, fraud, or coercion
in any type of labor, such as domestic work, agricultural labor or sex work,
it has been salaciously painted as being synonymous with prostitution. The
idea that prostitution equals trafficking has been burned into the public
mind by lurid headlines that scream of victims rescued from their captors,
often without follow-up news items that might explain that the reality is
more complicated, and that any number of prostitutes decided to go into that
work because it was a way to make enough money to live on and also support
their families, who are often in other countries.

Feminists who wish to abolish prostitution entirely have found strong allies
in the Christian right and in the Bush administration. The efforts to
incorrectly equate prostitution and trafficking as the same have culminated
in recent efforts around the federal anti-trafficking law that Congress has
been considering for reauthorization in 2008 (final vote still pending in
early July).

The House version of the legislation includes a dangerous and unnecessary
change to the Mann Act, a federal law that prohibits interstate travel for
the purpose of prostitution. This change has nothing to do with human
trafficking, and thus far, the Senate has bravely withstood pressure from
some feminists and have not included this expansion in their version of the
bill, SB 3061.

The federal anti-trafficking law, enacted in 2000, already defines anyone
under 18 who is involved in commercial sex acts, and anyone in prostitution
who experiences force, fraud or coercion as a victim of human trafficking.
Changing the definition of trafficking so that law enforcement does not need
to look at a person's age or experience of coercion (the heart of the
trafficking crime) will put the focus squarely on prostitution, rather than
on labor and prostitution situations in which people are living under a
climate of fear and experiencing genuine human rights abuses.

*Are We Listening?*

As law enforcement look for more victims, they will inevitably arrest more
sex workers, and will lessen their focus on people who are trafficked into
sectors other than prostitution. This will lead to untold harms to people
who have been trafficked into other labor sectors and who cannot receive the
help and attention they deserve; and to those who work in prostitution for
reasons as diverse and complicated as any that go into deciding how to make
money and build a life. At the Sex Workers Project, we find that most of our
clients go into sex work because they can make more money and work more
flexible hours than in other industries. In our 2005 study, 67 percent of
the sex workers we interviewed did not make a living wage in other jobs such
as waitressing, administrative work, or retail. For many, sex work was not
their only form of work -- 46 percent supplemented their income from
mainstream jobs with sex work.

The people we see every day at the Sex Workers Project are just like
everyone else -- they want to know that if they are a victim of a crime,
that they will receive the same attention as anyone else. What they do not
want is to be classified as a victim of human trafficking as they go about
the complicated business of living their lives and supporting their families
as best as they can.

All feminists need to agree that when we hear the voices of sex workers
advocating for their human rights, we need to really listen, rather than
impose our own views of what life decisions we might deem acceptable.

*Juhu Thukral, Esq., is the director of the Sex Workers Project at the Urban
Justice Center in New York City. She has been an advocate for the rights of
immigrant women in the areas of health, work, and sexuality for fifteen
years. *
(c) 2008 On The Issues Magazine All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/96875/

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