1. There are differing views among feminists on whether prostitution constitutes exploitation or a valid employment choice. Some see it as inherently exploitative and promoting gender inequality, while others argue for supporting consensual sex work.
2. In India, sex work is not legally recognized and prostitution is regulated through laws dealing with immorality, though some sex worker unions are advocating for recognition as a valid occupation.
3. Decriminalization advocates believe legalization could help address violence against sex workers and spread of disease, while those supporting criminalization argue it promotes trafficking and harms society.
1. There are differing views among feminists on whether prostitution constitutes exploitation or a valid employment choice. Some see it as inherently exploitative and promoting gender inequality, while others argue for supporting consensual sex work.
2. In India, sex work is not legally recognized and prostitution is regulated through laws dealing with immorality, though some sex worker unions are advocating for recognition as a valid occupation.
3. Decriminalization advocates believe legalization could help address violence against sex workers and spread of disease, while those supporting criminalization argue it promotes trafficking and harms society.
1. There are differing views among feminists on whether prostitution constitutes exploitation or a valid employment choice. Some see it as inherently exploitative and promoting gender inequality, while others argue for supporting consensual sex work.
2. In India, sex work is not legally recognized and prostitution is regulated through laws dealing with immorality, though some sex worker unions are advocating for recognition as a valid occupation.
3. Decriminalization advocates believe legalization could help address violence against sex workers and spread of disease, while those supporting criminalization argue it promotes trafficking and harms society.
1. There are differing views among feminists on whether prostitution constitutes exploitation or a valid employment choice. Some see it as inherently exploitative and promoting gender inequality, while others argue for supporting consensual sex work.
2. In India, sex work is not legally recognized and prostitution is regulated through laws dealing with immorality, though some sex worker unions are advocating for recognition as a valid occupation.
3. Decriminalization advocates believe legalization could help address violence against sex workers and spread of disease, while those supporting criminalization argue it promotes trafficking and harms society.
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INTRODUCTION
When lawyers, politician and doctors leave the office, they
may assume roles as husbands or wives, mothers or fathers and members of the community. Prostitutes on the other hand, are viewed as whores, drug addicts, and victims no matter where they are or what they are doing. Sex work is not just one of a number of jobs a person may hold. Rather it is a way of life- an identity that a person can never escape. Peninah Nyambura’s battered and lifeless body was discovered in the twilight months of 2012 stuffed in a drainage ditch in Thika, a small industrial town twenty-five miles outside of Nairobi, Kenya’s capital. Peninah was a Kenyan sex worker and the mother of a thirteen-year-old daughter. She was only thirty years old. Hers was the fourth murder of a sex worker in Thika in two years, but police turned a blind eye to the killings haunting the community.[1] Women are trafficked into prostitution, and therefore prostitution is violence. This is an understanding shared by people across the political divide. In India, the Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act, 1986 which in its earlier form was the Suppression of Immoral Traffic Act, 1956 deals essentially with prostitution and not trafficking. Incidentally, the term sex work finds no place in any law in the region. Instead, prostitute and prostitution are the vocabulary of law, terms that have gained centuries' worth of negative connotations. It is common knowledge that trafficking takes place not only for the purposes of sex work but also for begging, domestic work and marriage to name a few. Trafficking has to be looked at as an issue separate from sex work or prostitution. Sex workers' organisations have argued against trafficking and see it not only as a human rights violation, but also as a threat to their own work and credibility.[2]
Sex workers all over the world face a constant risk of
abuse. This is not news. Nor is it news that they are an extremely marginalized group of people, frequently forced to live outside the law. No one would be surprised to learn that they face discrimination, beatings, rape and harassment – sometimes on a daily basis – or that they are often denied access to basic health or housing services. Sex workers are particularly vulnerable to sexual violence on the job, but have few good option to report it. Sex workers of colour and transgender sex workers are though to be at even greater risk for experiencing violence, according to the Sex Workers Outreach Project. Around the world prostitutes, exotic dancers, and other sex labourers are organising for their rights. They are fighting to keep their brothels open, challenging stigma and stereotypes, and exposing corruption within the sex industry When advocates use the term “sex workers”, they referring to people who choose to participate in a range of sex-based work including prostitutes, escorts, strippers, pornography actors, erotic massage therapist, phone sex operates and nude webcam models, among other jobs. Consensual sex work should not be confused with sex trafficking, when people are forced into sex work by violence, threats or other forms of coercion. Sex workers say they have often been marginalized by mainstream feminists movements. Current and former sex workers, including activist Janet Mock, criticised the Women’s March organizers last year for erasing it’s statement of support for consensual sex's workers right from its national platform after it was initially released. The statement was later added back and Mock spoke at the March in Washington. “ Women’s March has been very intentional over the past year about trying to rebuild trust with the Sex worker community,” a spokesperson for the Women’s March organization said in a statement to TIME. “Sex workers rights are women’s rights plain and simple. That’s part of our platform and it needs to be a part of our movement.” [3]
INTERNATIONAL AND FEMINISTS VIEWS ON
PROSTITUTION There exists a diversity of feminist views on prostitution. Many of these positions can be loosely arranged into an overarching standpoint that is generally either critical or supportive of prostitution and sex work.[4] Based on studies done on the effects of prostitution in countries where it is legalized, many proponents of criminalization of prostitution states that prostitution promotes sex trafficking and increases child prostitution. Anti-prostitution feminists hold that prostitution is a form of exploitation of women and male dominance over women and a practice which is the result of the existing patriarchal societal order. These feminists argue that prostitution has a very negative effect, both on the prostitutes themselves and on society as a whole, as it reinforces stereotypical views about women, who are seen as sex objects which can be used and abused by men. Pro-prostitution feminists hold that prostitution and other forms of sex work can be valid choices for women and men who choose to engage in it. In this view, prostitution must be differentiated from forced prostitution, and feminists should support sex worker activism against abuses by both the sex industry and the legal system.[5]
These feminists point out that women from the lowest
socioeconomic classes—impoverished women, women with a low level of education, women from the most disadvantaged racial and ethnic minorities—are overrepresented in prostitution all over the world; as stated by Catherine MacKinnon: "If prostitution is a free choice, why are the women with the fewest choices the ones most often found doing it?".[10] MacKinnon, Catharine A. (2007). Women's Lives, Men's Laws. The Coalition Against Trafficking in Women ( CATW), defines prostitution as a form of sexual exploitation and the Global Reliance Against Trafficking in Women (GAATW), which advocates for the inclusion of a right to self- determination in anti- trafficking legislation. Legalization or decriminalization proponents, on the other hand, believe that the selling and buying of sex exchange will continue no matter what. Therefore, the only way to effectively prevent violence is to acknowledge this and for government to build policies and laws that deal with the issue through regulation of the business. [22] Legalization/Decriminalization proponents believe that a system that prohibits prostitution creates an oppressive environment for prostitutes.[27] Proponents of this view also recommend that policies are built that places restrictions on trafficking and exploitation of sex workers.[28]MOVEMENTS AND ACTIVISTS SUPPORTING SEX WORK. Jo Doemeza in Forced to Choose: Beyond the Voluntary v. Forced Prostitution, notes that the international discourse has shifted from primarily an abolitionist view of prostitution to one that distinguishes between free and forced prostitution. 1. Prostitution is a transaction where no one is harmed, and the persons involved are consenting adults. 2. Prostitution is a free choice. 3. Sex work is no more moral or immoral than other jobs. 4. Sex trafficking and coercion into the industry can be effectively reduced if sex work is legalized or decriminalized. 5. Decriminalization or legalization can protect sex workers from violence most effectively. 6. The spread of diseases can be hindered through the legalization or decriminalization of prostitution. 7. The rates of rape could decrease if prostitution were legalized or decriminalized. 8. Sex work could become a legal business, and human rights and worker's rights could be enforced by effective regulation. 9. Prostitution is a career option in which the free market is being taken advantage of and women's claims over their own bodies. 10. The criminalization of sex workers only exacerbates problems that they are already facing. Therefore, the decriminalization or legalization can be a starting point to addressing these issues.[29] Decriminalization is supported by academics, human rights organizations, such as Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the American Civil Liberties Union, UN agencies, such as UNAIDS, WHO, and UNDP, LGBT organizations such as ILGA and Lambda Legal, and anti-trafficking organizations such as the Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women, La Strada International, and the Freedom Network USA.[30]X
SEX WORKERS ORGANIZATION AND MOVEMENT IN
INDIA The KSWU is a union of women, men, and transgender sex workers who live in the southern state of Karnataka, India. Currently, at least 2,500 people have registered with KSWU. The union’s first organized public action was a rally on May 1, 2006, as an affiliate of the New Trade Union Initiative (NTUI). https://newlaborforum.cuny.edu/2015/06/08/sex-workers- join-the-indian-labor-movement/ KSWU strives to get sex work recognised as dignified labour, campaigns of decriminalization of sex work, and demands labour rights that are guaranteed to all other workers. unlike many other sex worker organizations in India, KSWU does not receive funding from international donors and has applied for official state registration as a trade union. Members pay a joining fee and then a monthly subscription. Although KSWU has not yet been officially recognized by the state as a trade union, its insistence on registering as a trade union is central to its organizational ideology. As one leader explained, “We want sex work to be considered a profession. Like how there are clear identities for auto drivers, lorry drivers. The same way, our profession has to be respected.” https://newlaborforum.cuny.edu/2015/06/08/sex-workers- join-the-indian-labor-movement/ [Accessed on 19.2.20] In Kolkata, the Durbar Mahila Samanwaya Committee (DMSC) which claims over sixty- five thousand members began as an HIV prevention project but, from the beginning drew on an occupational health and labour rights framework. India has two active national sex worker advocacy networks of community-based sex worker organizations. The relationship between these networks and labour activism in India has been uneven, but invoking the labour movement plays an important symbolic role in affirming sex work's position as labour and beginning to make links with other workers in the informal sector. https://newlaborforum.cuny.edu/2015/06/08/sex-workers- join-the-indian-labor-movement/ [Accessed on 19.2.2020] ENDNOTES 1. Mgbako, Chi Adanna. In To Live Freely in This World: Sex Worker Activism in Africa, 1-18. NYU Press, 2016 2. https://www.himalmag.com/legislating-morality/ [Accessed on 19.2.20] 3. https://www.google.com/amp/s/time.com/5104951/ sex-workers-me-too-movement/%3famp=true [Accessed on 19.2.20] 4. O'Neill, Maggie (2001) Prostitution and Feminism. Cambridge : Polity Press pp 14 – 16 5. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Feminist_views_on_prostitution#cite_ref-1 [Accessed on 19.2.20] 6. BIBLIOGRAPHY https://www.himalmag.com/legislating-morality/