sex work

Developing Research for Sex Work as a platform for collaboration with academia

NSWP is withdrawing from the Paulo Longo Research Initiative (PLRI) and will be focussing on expanding Research for Sex Work beyond the peer-reviewed journal that it currently publishes into a project that will seek to build a broad collaboration between academia, community researchers and the sex worker rights movement. Initially NSWP will establish a listserv to which we will invite individual sex workers and researchers who wish to be involved and who endorse the NSWP core values and principles:

  • Acceptance of sex work as work
  • Opposition to all forms of criminalisation and other legal oppression of sex work (including sex workers, clients, third parties, families, partners and friends).
  • Support self-organisation and self-determination of sex workers

NSWP members are asked to nominate researchers or individual sex workers to join the listserv, by sending their names and email addresses to R4SW@nswp.org. Researchers may also apply for membership of the R4SW listserv by sending a short introduction, (including links to at least 2 publications on sex work - or articles themselves if they are not open access publications) for circulation to NSWP members for endorsement by at least two members.

NSWP Board reserves the right to decline nominations or applications without providing any reason.

San Francisco: 'Condoms will not be used as evidence.'

San Francisco police will no longer use condoms as evidence when arresting and charging sex workers, according to an announcement by law enforcement agencies and the Human Rights Commission.

This announcement follows a six-month trial moratorium period in which condoms were not used as evidence in cases.

Read the full article in the San Francisco Examiner.

Sex Workers denied leave to intervene in Canadian Supreme Court Case

Press statement from Maggie's, Stella and POWER.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE. Le français suivra...

May 2, 2013 -- Supreme Court Justice Richard Wagner has denied several prominent sex worker groups the opportunity to intervene in the Bedford v. Canada appeal, to be heard at the Supreme Court of Canada on June 13th, 2013. 

The constitutional challenge to the prostitution laws could strike down laws that have documented direct and negative impact on the lives and working conditions of sex workers, bosses, security people and other third parties as well as the lives of sex workers’ clients and partners.

CEDAW shadow reports

In what is becoming an increasingly innovative mechanism for challenging country reports on the CEDAW treaty, two organisations have recently submitted CEDAW shadow reports. 

You can read the most recent shadow reports from the Sex-Worker Forum of Vienna and SZEXE which appear on our website.   

We think that member organisations may find these reports useful as guidance if they wish to submit their own shadow country reports in the future. 

For example, the next (55th) session of CEDAW will take place from 8th-26th July 2013 and will be looking as reports from the following countries:

  • Afghanistan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cape Verde, Cuba, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Dominican Republic, Serbia and United Kingdom

You can keep up to date on the reporting schedule and find guidance on how to report, etc. on the CEDAW website here.

NSWP has begun collating any CEDAW shadow reports that other sex work organisations are happy to share, on our website under this CEDAW tag.  If your organisation has submitted a report and you are happy to have it featured on our website please contact us.

In Response to Scottish Trades Union Congress Decision to Disregard the Rights of Sex Workers to Organise and Unionise

NSWP Statement

NSWP condemns the recent decision by the Scottish Trades Union Congress (STUC) to cancel their agreement with Sex Worker Open University (SWOU) to provide a venue for the upcoming ‘Sex Workers’ Rights and Community Building Festival’.

The ‘Sex Workers’ Rights and Community Building Festival’ brings together sex workers and allies from across the world and has attracted worldwide attention and public interest. It provides opportunities for both sex workers and other experts to share ideas and experiences, organise for sex workers’ rights, and strategise around resisting harmful laws and policies. The decision to organise this festival in Scotland is extremely timely in light of recent attempts to criminalise those who purchase sexual services (known as the ‘Swedish Model’). This approach is one that has been criticised heavily by NSWP and our members as it negatively impacts upon the health and human rights of sex workers. 

Sex work is recognised as informal labour by International Labour Organisation and sex workers are protected under ILO Recommendation 200[1]. NSWP regrets and condemns the decision of STUC to take an approach to sex workers' rights that sits in contradiction to the recommendations of the ILO. This position is a clear dismissal of sex workers as deserving of trade union support and undermines their fundamental human right to organise and unionise.

In a statement the STUC claimed their decision was taken because the title of the event diametrically contradicts the STUC position – and yet the title of the event to have been held in the STUC building is ‘Looking at Laws and Policies that Impact on Sex Workers and Strategies for Resistance and Change.’, not as claimed “The Scottish Context: Opposing Criminalisation of Clients.”, which is the topic of one presentation by SCOT-PEP representing Scottish sex workers perspectives.  The STUC decision clearly represents an attempt to stifle the voices of sex workers and evidence-based debate on the current discourse in Scotland and beyond. It should also be noted that the STUC did not refuse to host this event but cancelled the booking at very short notice after publicity materials had been produced and distributed, at significant cost to a poorly-resourced sex worker rights movement.

NSWP urge the STUC to review their position in relation to supporting sex workers to organise, rather than be part of the system that oppresses sex workers. Sex work is work and sex workers must be afforded the same labour rights as any other workers. Any political perspective or legal framework that refuses to acknowledge this violates the human rights of sex workers.

下载资源: 

Sex Work Digest - Issue 3

年份: 
2013

This is the third issue of NSWP's quarterly newsletter ‘Sex Work Digest’. 

This resource is in English.  You can download this 5 page PDF above.

NSWP opportunities - Research for Sex Work EDITOR

NSWP has received funding from HIVOS to support the publication of the next edition of our journal Research for Sex Work 14.

DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS:  Friday, 26 April 2013 @ 24.00.

Sex-Worker Forum of Vienna supplement to CEDAW shadow report 2013

年份: 
2013

Sex-Worker Forum of Vienna, Austria - supplement to the Shadow CEDAW report submitted to the 54th Session of CEDAW February / March 2013.

You can download this 36 page PDF report above.

This resource is in English.

Sex-Worker Forum of Vienna CEDAW shadow report 2013

年份: 
2013

Sex-Worker Forum of Vienna, Austria - Shadow CEDAW report submitted to the 54th Session of CEDAW February / March 2013.

You can download this 44 page PDF report above.

This resource is in English.

SZEXE CEDAW shadow report 2013

年份: 
2013

SZEXE Shadow CEDAW report submitted to the 54th Session of CEDAW February / March 2013.

You can download this 16 page PDF report above.

This resource is in English.