http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3213&Itemid=404


 Why Do Women in India Become Sex Workers?

Written by Geeta Seshu    
Wednesday, 25 May 2011 
They can make more money and live better 




Poverty and limited education push females into labor markets at an early age, 
but the sheer desire for a better income and a better life pushes them into sex 
work, according to a path-breaking, pan-India survey of sex workers.  


Only about 20 percent of the women surveyed were forced, sold, cheated or 
otherwise pushed into sex work according to the study, which was conducted in 
2009 and only recently released.  Nearly 80 percent of the 3,000 females 
surveyed in 14 states across the country entered sex work by themselves. The 
higher incomes and livelihoods they could access weighed significantly in that 
decision. The harsh fact is that for many women, working conditions are cruel 
or incomes are disastrously low in other labor markets, the survey 
categorically revealed.  


 "Sex work as work should be placed in the context of women's choice rather 
than our own understanding or preferences," said economist Rohini Sahni, who 
released the preliminary findings of the survey in Mumbai. 


In the post-HIV context, hygiene or control of the 'high risk' population 
dominates surveys of sex workers, but there was no information on the economic 
aspects of their work, Sahni said.  


Sahni and V. Kalyan Shankar of Pune University's Department of Economics 
analysed the data emerging from the survey, which was conducted under the aegis 
of the Centre for Advocacy on Stigma and Marginalisation (CASAM) as part of the 
Paulo Longo Research Initiative (PLRI) on sex work research.  


The women who participated in this unique survey come from different 
backgrounds, ages, language, cultures and states as diverse as Andhra Pradesh, 
Assam, Bihar, Goa, Nagaland, Uttar Pradesh, and so on. More than 35 civil 
society organizations and individuals fanned out to administer a questionnaire 
to the sex workers, chosen in areas where they were not collectivized so as to 
preclude any influence in the responses. 


What they found was that poverty and limited education push women into the 
labor force at early ages and sex workers are no exception. While 60 percent 
were from rural family backgrounds and 65 percent from poor family backgrounds 
- 26 percent are of middle class origins. Half of them had no schooling while 
the educational levels of the others were seven percent (primary schooling up 
to Class Four), 13.4 percent (secondary schooling up to Class Seven), 6.5 
percent (up to Class Ten) and 11.3 percent (up to Class Twelve). 


The percentages of those who were forced (7.1), sold (2.8), cheated (9.2) or 
were 'devadasis' (0.6), as against the 79.4 per cent who said that they entered 
sex work of their own volition, was an interesting indicator of the 'force' 
versus 'choice' debate in many discussions on sex work.   


"There is a lot of misinformation on this issue because of our obsession with 
trafficking. Very few women are forced into sex work but the public narrative 
is overwhelmingly that of force," said anthropologist Professor Andrea Cornwall 
of  the University of Sussex, UK, who is part of PLRL, a global network of 
academics and activists engaged in research on sex work.  


The findings of such a survey would give recognition to the labour of women in 
sex work as well as start a discourse on their working conditions - a precursor 
to determining their rights, Prof. Cornwall added. 


Of the 3,000 women surveyed, 1,158 said that they had entered sex work 
directly, 1,488 said they had experience of other labor markets before or 
alongside sex work, while 326 had other work identities but the sequence of 
their entry was not known. Sahni, unscrambling the data, revealed that the sex 
workers listed a range of activities they did before getting into sex work: 
Puri and papad-making, domestic work, tailoring, working in beauty parlors, 
doing agricultural labor or construction labor, or peddling anything from 
bangles to socks to fruit and vegetables. 


Asked why they left their earlier occupations, the predominant response was 
economic: Low pay, no profit in business, no regular work, insufficient money 
to run the home. The harassment and harsh working conditions they faced as 
unorganized laborers, coupled with insufficient income, made them consider sex 
work as a more economically rewarding option, according to Sahni. 


Respondents said they made incomes between Rs 500-1,000 per month (US$1=Rs 44) 
in other labor markets. They revealed that there was an immediate jump when 
they came into sex work, citing incomes ranging from Rs 1,000-3,000, with a 
substantial number saying they earned anything between Rs 3,000-5,000. 


Interestingly, an examination of the categories of those forced/sold/cheated or 
involving an element of abuse was roughly similar across those who entered sex 
work directly and those who entered after working in other labor markets, at 
22.1 percent and 24.8 percent, respectively. However, those sold were much 
higher in the category of direct entrants, and the agents involved in this 
abuse were husbands, lovers, friends and acquaintances. 


Another interesting aspect emerging from the preliminary analysis of the data 
was that 60.27 percent of women who entered the profession were in the 19-22 
age group. While some of them may later go on to work in other labor markets 
(at 23-26 years of age), the females from other labor markets who enter into 
sex work do so at 19-22 years, with others in the 23-26 year or 27-30 year age 
groups. 


The survey yielded a rich store of data, but more number crunching and analysis 
are required to determine trends related to sexuality, abuse, stigma, migration 
patterns for the female, male and transgender sex workers. But, as Sahni put 
it, at least some middle ground can be established to address the reality of 
sex work and demystify simplistic and stereotypical narratives about it. 


© Women's Feature Service 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

Post message: [email protected]
Subscribe   :  [email protected]
Unsubscribe :  [email protected]
List owner  :  [email protected]
Homepage    :  http://proletar.8m.com/Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Kirim email ke