Report: Sex Workers Face Widespread Abuse of Civil and Human Rights
Thursday 04 November 2010
by: Penelope Saunders | RH Reality Check | Report
This Friday, November 5, 2010, the United States will be reviewed as part of the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) process at the UN Human Rights Commission in Geneva. The UPR is a relatively new way of addressing human rights in the UN system that came into being in 2008. During the review of the U.S. on Friday, other countries will ask questions about this country’s overall human rights record and propose recommendations that the United States will need to respond to over the next three months. The session can be viewed online as a webcast. This review is a historic occasion because the U.S. typically has a limited engagement with international human rights treaties and mechanisms.
Advocates for the rights of sex workers used the upcoming review of the United States to prepare the first comprehensive national statement on the rights challenges faced by people in the sex trade and people who are affected by anti-prostitution policies more generally (download a PDF of the 5 page report here). The report illustrates the ways in which stigmatization and criminalization of sex workers in the United States result in widespread abuses of civil and human rights, including the right to be free from discrimination; freedom from torture; the right to healthcare; and the right to equal protection under the law. These abuses are rampant in working class, majority African-American and Latino, and urban communities. Arrests for sex work can lead to a cycle of continued exclusion from housing, marginalization from formal employment, and re-imprisonment. Furthermore, law enforcement officers frequently commit physical and sexual violence against sex workers, while simultaneously failing to recognize that sex workers can be victims of crime, denying justice or support to sex workers who seek their help.
Two representatives from the Best Practices Policy Project, a group that coordinated the production of the report from sex worker advocates in the U.S in partnership with the Desiree Alliance and the Sexual Rights Initiative, are currently in Geneva presenting summary recommendations to diplomatic delegations and encouraging countries to ask the United States questions about its human rights record with respect to sex workers and other communities affected by the policing of sexual exchange. While few countries are prepared to be outspoken to defend sex worker rights, the activists on the ground report some encouraging conversations with country delegations, and remain hopeful that this will be the first time sex worker concerns are raised within the UPR milieu.
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coal miners in Virginia have
Mon, 11/08/2010 - 07:47 — Anonymous (not verified)coal miners in Virginia have it rough to
Much like with illegal
Mon, 11/08/2010 - 13:14 — GT66 (not verified)Much like with illegal drugs, our puritanical views in the country only serve to make matters much worse. We should accept that to some degree, prohibition of certain adult activities is a failed policy. Legalizing prostitution at the very least puts sex workers on the books. It allows them representation and protection and frees up enforcement resources for more important priorities. Alas, just like Prop 19 in California, the Puritans and big business always seem to win out against common sense.
Sex worker legalization only
Mon, 11/08/2010 - 14:20 — Anonymous (not verified)Sex worker legalization only leads to increases in child sex abuse and pornography in those coutries where it is legal. If you don't want your children falling prey to child predators or being abducted into the illegal sex trade, you'd do well to abhor legalization of prostitution in any form that includes groups of more than 2. Prostitutes reap what they sow. In my view prostitution does not produce anything and has no redeemable quality. It is also an unequal transaction based upon the civil ability to defraud both participating consenting parties.