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This 10th Missing the Target report (MTT10) focuses on challenges to the scale-up of HIV services as required to implement the Treatment 2.0 framework. That framework refers to an initiative developed and proposed in June 2010 by the World Health Organization (WHO) and Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) that aims to “catalyse the next phase of HIV treatment scale-up through promoting innovation and efficiency gains.”

Briefing paper produced by Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors without Borders) that oulines the Trans-Pacific Partnership deal being negotiated between the U.S. and ten other Pacific nations.

过刊可以在以下网址下载:性工作研究

目录:

  • 卷首语(Laura María Agustín)
  • 扫黄对中国性工作与艾滋病防治的影响 (中国性工作者机构网络平台) 
  • 与艾滋病毒共存:我如何善待自己(Diputo Lety讲述,Elsa Oliveira整理)
  • 男性性工作者、艾滋病和法律(Brendan Michael Conner)
  • 将疾病的传播归咎于性工作者:一段漫长的历史 (Tiphaine Besnard)
  • 与全球基金合作的经验(泰国赋权基金会)
  • 厄瓜多尔马查拉的生殖健康外展教育 (Asociación ’22 de junio’和Colectivo Flor de Azalea)
  • 在纳米比亚推动由性工作者主导的研究 (Matthew Greenall,Abel Shinana)
  • 没有我们,艾滋病疫情无法扭转(Cheryl Overs)
  • 尼日利亚的同性恋聚会及男性性工作者(Kehinde Okanlawon,Ade Iretunde
  • 禁止把安全套作为证据》:纽约的性工作者运动 (Audacia Ray,Sarah Elspeth Patterson
  • “这不是我的地方”: 威尼斯和爱丁堡的阳性性工作者 (Nicoletta Policek)
  • 津巴布韦、喀麦隆和尼日利亚:女用安全套的使用情况 (Winny Koster, Marije Groot Bruinderink

PEPFAR has made anti-retroviral treatment (ART) available for many people, including sex workers.  However, PEPFAR funding contracts with organisations specify that a certain amount of this money be spent on abstinence programming.  Contracts include a clause that the organisation accepting funding is opposed to prostitution.  This has been called the 'anti-prostitution pledge' or 'anti-prostitution loyalty oath'.

PEPFAR has made anti-retroviral treatment (ART) available for many people, including sex workers.  However, PEPFAR funding contracts with organisations specify that a certain amount of this money be spent on abstinence programming.  Contracts include a clause that the organisation accepting funding is opposed to prostitution.  This has been called the 'anti-prostitution pledge' or 'anti-prostitution loyalty oath'.

The criminalisation of sex workers’ clients is often claimed to be part of a new legal framework to eradicate sex work and trafficking by ‘ending demand’. In 1999, Sweden criminalised sex workers’ clients and maintained the criminalisation of third parties such as brothel-owners, managers, security and support staff. The individual selling of sex remained legal. This model is frequently referred to as the ‘Swedish’, ‘Nordic’ or ‘End Demand’ model. There is great pressure in many countries to advance such legal and policy measures. The damaging consequences of this model on sex workers’ health, rights and living conditions are rarely discussed.  

The criminalisation of sex workers’ clients is often claimed to be part of a new legal framework to eradicate sex work and trafficking by ‘ending demand’. In 1999, Sweden criminalised sex workers’ clients and maintained the criminalisation of third parties such as brothel-owners, managers, security and support staff. The individual selling of sex remained legal. This model is frequently referred to as the ‘Swedish’, ‘Nordic’ or ‘End Demand’ model. There is great pressure in many countries to advance such legal and policy measures. The damaging consequences of this model on sex workers’ health, rights and living conditions are rarely discussed.  

The conflation of trafficking and migration with sex work, in law and practice, presents challenges to NSWP.

This NSWP briefing paper explains how sex work is conflated with trafficking; the legal framework; how demand for sex work is conflated with trafficking; the dangers of conflating trafficking with sex work, its impacts on sex workers’ lives and work; the impact on sex worker programming; and offers some recommendations for policy makers, donors and for civil society.