promoting health and human rights |
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Job Offer: Information Technology Consultant in Sexual Health and Rights Project (SHARP)BackgroundIn April 2005, the Public Health Program (PHP) of the Open Society Institute officially launched the Sexual Health and Rights Project (SHARP) to develop and implement a global strategy to improve the sexual health and rights of socially marginalized populations, particularly related to HIV/AIDS. SHARP's strategic vision is to forge a niche that responds to opportunities and gaps in this nascent field to ensure that those who are stigmatized because of their sexual practices; real or perceived sexual orientation; ethnicity; and/or drug use have access to quality health and social services and ability to effectively advocate for their rights. Sex workers are one of the marginalized groups with which SHARP works closely. Sex workers face a wide range of human rights abuses in all regions of the world, frequently as a result of the laws, policies, and practices of governments and state actors. Officials charged with enforcing prostitution laws routinely extort bribes, confessions, testimony, and other "favors" from sex workers. In the worst cases, police beat, detain, rape, and torture sex workers, and face little or no accountability for their actions because of sex workers' relative powerlessness and social marginalization. Even well intentioned groups frequently support policies and services that violate sex workers' human rights. For example, alleged "best practices" in HIV/AIDS work such as 100% condom-use polices have been implemented as the basis for sex worker surveillance and arrest. Likewise, raids to rescue sex workers often drive sex workers deeper underground away from programs that support their health and rights, destroy networks of support for people in sex work and, ironically, fail to help most trafficked persons. Girls and women "rescued" in such raids have been held in detention by governments in India, Thailand, the US and elsewhere, and then deported without assistance back into rights-violating environments. In April of 2007 SHARP will host a meeting in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, to bring together 30 sex worker network representatives and advocates from around the world to develop a sex worker-led global advocacy campaign addressing human rights abuses committed in the name of assisting sex workers. The objectives of the meeting are to:
Technology issues for sex worker networkingCheap and effective communication between sex worker networks within countries, in the regions and globally has been and still is a major challenge to networking and effective joint action. The others are language and resources. The costs of telecommunication and lack of access to higher technology has meant that network communication is often sporadic and limited to those who speak English or share another common language. As various new communication technologies become available in countries across the world it is necessary for sex worker organizations to take stock of what technologies sex worker groups, projects and allied organizations have access to and work out how to make the best use of those technologies for communication, network building and joint campaigns and advocacy. We are interested in exploring technologies that are assessable to as many organizations as possible looking at two major areas of technology: computer and internet access and cellular phone/mobile web access. Consultant's responsibilitiesThe consultant will be responsible for the following activities:
Materials produced
Duration: February - August, 2007 Please send a cover letter, resume, day rate and estimate to Rachel Thomas by January 31, 2007. Reference: Women's Information Technology Transfer |
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Created: April 18, 2007 Last modified: April 18, 2007 |
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Network of Sex Work Projects Email: secretariat@nswp.org |