Tuesday, May 20
2003 @ 11:48 AM PDT Contributed by: Admin Views:
1968
Submitted by cynder:
WHY FEMINISTS
SHOULD RETHINK ON SEX WORKERS’ RIGHTS
Hilary
Kinnell UK Network of Sex Work Projects
MY
PERSONAL BACKGROUND
I am 54. I took a degree in
history at the University of Sussex in 1970. My
employment history has been varied, covering
race
relations, community development, youth work
and sexual health. In 1987 I began working in the
Department of Public Health in Birmingham, on developing
HIV prevention strategies. This brought me into the
field of prostitution. I set up and managed the
Birmingham HIV prevention project for sex workers until
1996.
My approach to this enterprise was grounded
in principles of community development work: to start
from the expressed views of the target group about their
own needs and perceptions of problems, and to involve
the target group in the development and running of the
project as far as possible. I also built on four years
experience of working in clinics for sexually
transmitted diseases. During those four years, I learned
about the Contagious Diseases Acts of the nineteenth
century, and the provisions of DORA that were applied in
both world wars, but from a very clear standpoint that
these forms of coercion to combat sexually-transmitted
diseases were not only abusive, but also ineffective.
The mantra of the STD service I worked in was that
treatment and prevention could only succeed where the
service was voluntary, confidential and
free.
During my nine years with the sex work
project in Birmingham, I was marginally aware that there
were feminist views that defined sex work as abuse of
women, but not that HIV prevention work with sex workers
was often viewed as a direct inheritor of the provisions
of the Contagious Diseases Acts: that the ECP expressed
views of this kind I did know, but as they also adopted
the view that HIV was a myth designed to stop black
people reproducing, I considered their opinions
irrelevant. However, I never imagined that feminists of
any persuasion would initiate, embrace or endorse
policies towards sex work that actively endanger sex
workers’ health and safety, increase their
criminalization, or define them as incapable of making
their own judgements about their own best interests.
Neither did I ever expect to see feminist analyses of
sex work bolstering sexist and racist law enforcement
and immigration agendas. Over the past several years,
however, all of these – to my mind – perversions of
feminism, have become impossible to ignore.
UK
NETWORK OF SEX WORK PROJECTS
I am now the network
co-ordinator of the UK Network of Sex Work Projects
(formerly Europap-UK). This network brings together
projects that are actively and daily engaged in
promoting sex workers’ health and safety. The UKNSWP
aims
To promote the health, safety, civil and
human rights of sex workers, including their rights to
live free from violence, intimidation, coercion or
exploitation, to engage in the work as safely as
possible, and to receive high quality health and other
services in conditions of trust and confidentiality,
without discrimination on the grounds of gender, sexual
orientation, disability, race, culture or
religion.
Most of the projects in the UKNSWP are
staffed by people, like me, who come from social work,
nursing or similar backgrounds. Most, like me, have
developed their ideas about the politics and philosophy
of sex work in the daily struggle to make life a bit
safer for people who are criminalized, stigmatized and
abused by the society around them. Most, like me, find
the abolitionist approach to sex work at best,
profoundly unrealistic, at worst, cruel, dangerous and
demeaning towards sex workers. It is this fact, that
many practitioners in the field are variously bewildered
or appalled by the effect of abolitionist thinking on
public policy towards sex work, that gives me the
temerity to take on the debate.
SEX AS A
COMMODITY
One of the topics covered in this
seminar series was the question of whether it is ever
acceptable for sexual activity be ascribed monetary
value. We discussed payment for reproductive labour, and
I heard no argument that convinced me that sexual labour
could or should be excluded from the area of contract or
employment rights. If it is acceptable to rent out one’s
womb, and if it is appropriate to define the rights of
the parties involved through contract, I cannot see any
reason why one should not be allowed to rent out one’s
vagina, or any other part of one’s body or aspect of
one’s personality.
However, I think it is
somehow easier to regard womb rental as less intimately
connected with a woman’s essential being than vagina
rental, because it is assumed that surrogacy does not
involve sexual pleasure either for the surrogate or for
the biological father. Objections to sex work seem to
focus on the unacceptability of sexual pleasure being
commodified, as if human beings’ capacity for sexual
pleasure was so special and important, it should never
be tarnished by the exchange of money. I find this odd.
We accept the commodification of water and food, without
which no human life would be possible, why not sex?
Overt commodification of sexuality goes on all
the time in advertising, the entertainment industry, and
in societies where dowries are still an important
element in marriage; it also goes on covertly within
monogamous relationships, where one partner expects to
be rewarded for allowing the other partner to have sex.
These factors may explain why this country, and many
others, does not outlaw the exchange of sex for money or
other material benefits , despite the draconian
prohibitions on many aspects of commercial sex.
It is also interesting that the new
International Union of Sex Workers has a similar
understanding of “sex work” as radical feminism: in the
IUSW, strippers, pole-dancers and those providing
telephone sex define themselves as sex workers,
occupations entirely within the law. Now that the IUSW
has successfully allied itself to the labour movement,
demanding recognition of labour rights in these legal
areas of the sex industry, the illogicality of not
recognising the same rights for those working in
brothels becomes very obvious.
I do not argue
that this commodification of the body or persona is
“ideal”, just that, since it happens, it is better to
define and defend the rights of those involved.
CONSENT AND CHOICE
Exactly what does or
should constitute consent to sex is currently under
debate, in the context of the proposed changes in sex
offences legislation. There is general acceptance that
sex without consent (however defined) is a crime, but
the clear intention of the government is to
decriminalize a number of sexual acts, provided the
participants are able to consent.
I suggest that
the proposals for defining absence of consent contained
in the recent Command Paper, Protecting the Public
(2002) are appropriate in the context of sex work, i.e.
where the victim
was subject to force or the
fear of force was subject to threats or fear of
serious harm or serious detriment to themselves or
another person was abducted or unlawfully
detained was unconscious was unable to
communicate by reason of physical disability had
agreement given for them by a third party.
In the
absence of these conditions, to deny sex workers the
right to consent to sex in exchange for money would put
them in the same category as children under the age of
13, and adults with severe learning disabilities or
mental disorders – in other words, a return to the days
when women could be set to mental hospitals for having
illegitimate children, or acting in ways that
embarrassed their adult male relatives.
The Home
Office review of sex offences, Setting the Boundaries,
(2000) , rejects such paternalistic approaches to
limiting sexual behaviour. It states
“The key
question to address is whether it is right for the
criminal law to be used to regulate consensual sexual
behaviour between consenting adults where there is no
harm to either of them. The criminal law is not an
arbiter of private morality but an expression of what is
needed to protect society as a whole. In a tolerant and
diverse society, the law should be based on a public
morality that protects the individual from danger, harm,
fear or distress, with additional safeguards for the
younger and frailer members of the community. This would
provide against force, coercion and harm. Respect for
private life means that any regulation which is proposed
must be limited to what is necessary in a democratic
society and proportionate to the problem. Such a concept
of the criminal law does not condone or advocate any
particular sexual behaviour, but is based on principles
of preventing harm and promoting public good.” (Chapter
6, paragraph 6.2.4)
However, these principles, of
non-interference in consensual acts between adults in
private where no harm is done; not using the criminal
law as an arbiter of private morality; respect for
private life; responses proportionate to the problem,
and protection from force, coercion and harm, have not
been applied to recommendations concerning commercial
sex. Nevertheless, neither Setting the Boundaries, nor
Protecting the Public, seeks to establish that
commercial sex is an activity to which the seller cannot
consent.
So it seems that, in law, it is possible
to consent to selling sex, even though the government
intends to retain all aspects of its criminalization,
however greatly such criminalization endangers sex
workers.
SELLING SEX: WHAT ARE THE REAL
CHOICES?
Abolitionist feminism alleges that no
woman chooses to sell sex. This dictum applies even
where the woman herself believes she is making a free
choice to sell sexual services and even where no
physical violence or external coercion takes
place.
I believe it is completely incompatible
with the human right to autonomy, and with what I
understand by feminism, to dismiss or override any
woman’s choices or assessment of her own best interests.
To denigrate women’s choices as self-delusional or based
on “false consciousness” is not feminism but fascism. I
find this dismissal of women’s choices especially
offensive when those doing the dismissing are
privileged, university-based westerners and the women
whose choices they dismiss are from poor communities
bearing the brunt of global economic and social
inequalities. However, I do not wholly identify with the
definition of “sex workers’ rights feminism” given by
Julia O’Connell Davidson in her paper on the demand side
of trafficking:
They reject the idea that
prostitution is intrinsically or essentially degrading,
and treating prostitution as a form of service work,
they make a strong distinction between “free choice”
prostitution by adults and all forms of forced and child
prostitution. Whilst they believe the latter should be
outlawed, they hold the former to be a job like any
other.
I think the question of whether sex work
is intrinsically or essentially degrading is irrelevant,
since to make that judgement involves a number of
beliefs about the place of sexual activity in human
relationships, which it is unlikely all societies will
ever agree on, never mind all individuals. In my
experience, many sex workers do feel their occupation is
degrading, feel self-hatred and shame, and while this
state of mind may be largely due to the stigmatization
and demonization they experience from “respectable”
society, it may also arise out of personal religious
beliefs, beliefs that sex itself is disgusting, or out
of the experience of giving sexual services to people
they find personally unattractive. However, other sex
workers do not share these feelings or beliefs. Many see
the role of sex worker as a “role”, in the sense of
acting a part, which some play with relish and personal
enjoyment; others play professionally, pleased if a good
performance is well-rewarded, but without necessarily
getting much personal satisfaction from the job.
Neither do I make a strong distinction between free
and forced prostitution. Everyone can only choose their
occupations and way of life within highly constraining
circumstances: the economic and social conditions of
ones family, community and country, as well as
individual abilities and psychology. Few people in any
occupation can claim completely free choice in how they
earn their living, and sex workers may be more
constrained than others in the level of choice they
exercise. Because “choice” is not a fixed concept, it is
easy to argue that any sex worker did not make a “free
choice” to be involved in the business, that she was
“forced” by poverty, by psychological factors, by
societal expectations, etc. Nevertheless, I argue that
absence of “choice”, like absence of consent, could be
defined by certain tests, such as whether she was
deceived about the nature of the work was subject
to violence or threats of violence against herself or
her family was drugged was abducted or
imprisoned had personal documentation removed (e.g.
passport) was unable to refuse certain customers or
sexual activities
I do not think that sex work is
“a job like any other”. It manifestly is not. I use the
term “sex work”, because it avoids the moral
condemnation often attached to the term “prostitution”.
It also reflects the reality that commercial sex, even
where illegal, is an economic activity, and as such, is
influenced by market forces, such as supply and demand.
I also believe that understanding sex work as a form of
labour helps to promote rights and protections for sex
workers, such as the right to safe working conditions
and protection from exploitation and
violence.
VIOLENCE
Abolitionist feminism
further alleges that all commercial sex is in and of
itself, violence against women. Proposals to improve
safety for sex workers by legitimising their working
situations are rejected as legitimising violence against
women, since sex work itself is deemed violence.
Toleration zones for street sex work are described as
“legalised rape camps” , despite evidence that sex
workers are much less likely to be attacked or murdered
if they work in such zones. Within this discourse, it
seems there is no incentive to distinguish between acts
to which the woman herself has consented (however
mistakenly), and acts which leave her physically harmed
or dead. This is the “fate worse than death” mentality:
the Victorian ladies’ view that sexual “violation” is so
devastating, death is actually preferable. It is an
attitude of helplessness, because if there is
qualitatively no difference between the “violence” of
society which “forces” a woman to become a lap dancer,
and the violence that expresses itself in beatings, rape
and murder, there is no incentive to examine,
understand, or reduce the latter sort of
violence.
Also noticeable is the ease with which
this analysis of sex work elides with repressive state
policies towards sex workers themselves, and with
conservative, punitive, religious views on sexuality.
The religious right rejects the decriminalisation or
legalisation of sex work that would be necessary to
allow safer sex work environments, as an offence against
morality. Alternatively, such measures are rejected in
case they “encourage” women to enter or remain in
prostitution, by making it safer and therefore more
attractive. The logical corollary of such arguments is
that violence against sex workers should not be
prevented, because it acts as a control on the numbers
of women involved in prostitution.
This situation
is not confined to the UK. In Kampala, Uganda, a study
of 500 sex workers showed that more than half believed
the law “increases their vulnerability to and spread of
HIV/AIDS. This was mainly through violence by clients
forcing them into unprotected sex (84.1%), inability to
report and prosecute violent clients (74.6%), rape by
clients and security personnel (69.8%), and undermining
design of interventions for commercial sex workers
(22.2%).” In this study, 91.7% of sex workers thought
that sex work should be legalized to improve this
situation.
In Cambodia, a recent survey of sex
workers’ experiences of law enforcement showed that 72%
had suffered human rights abuses by the police . Under
the Cambodia law on Suppression of the Kidnapping and
Trafficking/Sales of Human Persons, and Exploitation of
Human Persons, the authors state:
In implementing
this law, it is not the brothel owners or clients who
are arrested, but it is the sex workers who are
systematically blamed, targeted and incarcerated.
Furthermore, during the arrests, and sex worker’s
general day-to-day work, there are reports of sex
worker’s human rights being continuously violated by the
police, clients and owners.
It was typically
stated that the police forced their way into the
brothel, or rented room where the sex worker operates,
and that they were violently taken to the police
station. During police arrests, many respondents stated
that they were beaten with sticks, their hair was pulled
to force them onto motto taxis, and there were also
reports of sex workers being beaten to the head, in many
instances by the policeman’s gun. One woman explained
that during her arrest, the policeman in question
threatened her by placing his gun to her head.
Furthermore, 4 sex workers surveyed stated that during
their arrest, they were forced by the police to have
sex. When respondents were asked to explain how their
human rights were violated while they were detained in
the police station, some sex worker’s commented that
they had been locked in a room, not given food, and
forced to do domestic chores, such as, washing the
floors and toilets. There were also reports of sex
workers being forced to give massages to
policemen.
Most public policy towards sex work
reflects fear and hatred of sex workers, exacerbates
their vulnerability, and hinders the investigation of
crimes of violence against them. It is therefore
possible to conceptualize violence against sex workers
as one aspect of public policy in the control of
prostitution. The argument that policies and legal
changes which would promote safer working conditions
should be rejected, lest they should “encourage” sex
work, demonstrates that the violence is seen by many as
a deterrent, as well as a punishment to those
involved.
That people who claim to be feminists
should embrace these positions seems extraordinary, yet
most anti-trafficking and anti-client strategies depend
entirely on law-enforcement
interventions.
ANTI-TRAFFICKING
PROGRAMMES
The total disregard of many
anti-trafficking programmes for not only the choices and
aspirations of the women and girls targeted, but also
for the most basic economic and social realities of
their lives, is shown in recent research in Nepal.
Researchers reviewing the policies of anti-trafficking
NGOs, found that the messages they adopted failed to
take account of the wishes of young women and girls to
move away from their homes. Instead, they encouraged
women and girls to stay in their villages, even though
“40% of adolescent girls (n=1269, aged 14-19 years) want
to move out of their current villages, especially those
with higher levels of education (p=.001), and 85% want
to travel to urban areas. Only three NGOs gave advice on
what to do if approached by someone for work or
marriage. While such advice takes the first step of
acknowledging that women and girls migrate, it is often
not enough to safeguard them. For example, advice to be
wary of strangers is inadequate since surveyed girls
more frequently implicated family (33%), other relatives
(58%) and community members (70%) than strangers (11%)
as traffickers.”
The researchers also found that
“most anti-trafficking interventions used fear-based
messages that emphasize links between trafficking,
prostitution, and HIV infection. This approach has
resulted in condemnation of trafficked women and girls
by their communities, “for disgracing their families as
well as for bringing HIV/AIDS into their communities
when they return. 94.0% of adolescent girls report that
communities regard returnees with hate.”
These
reports from Nepal are reflected in an article in the
Kathmandu Post :
“A sour truth is, not everyone
wishes to come back to Nepal and a certain organisation
called STOP in the area is notorious for raiding
brothels forcibly at midnight and taking Nepali women
away and later subjecting them to threats and
exploitation everyday,” says Laxmi Pokharel, program
officer at ABC Nepal, another local NGO which rescues
and rehabilitates trafficked women.
According to
Pokharel, who is just back from leading a team to the
notorious GB Road in New Delhi, since only STOP has been
given the monopoly and the license to raid and rescue
girls, corruption and threats against girls are rife.
“Girls told me that to stay back in the brothels they
have to bribe these rescue men and are often subjected
to exploitation and threats”.
Many women who are
brought back to Nepal and sent to rehabilitation centres
are neither positive about it, nor do they stick with
rehab measures for long. They go right back into
prostitution. Bipana Maya, for instance, was brought
back from Delhi in 1999 and rehabilitated for a year.
Today, not surprisingly, she is again a commercial sex
worker in the capital.
“With some counselling and
skill training like knitting, we can't get around
anywhere. If I knew that this is what I would get for
leaving the brothel, I wouldn't have come back,” Maya
says.
But Maya did try to live normal life back
in Chitwan. Ironically her community did not accept her.
She says, “I then realised that it is the society that
needs rehabilitation and not just us”.
(26.7.02)
There are many other examples of how
anti-trafficking measures can lead to infringement of
sex workers’ human rights, including compulsory medical
examination, and expose those they intend to benefit to
further criminalization, for instance
In France
in September this year, over 40 women were arrested
alongside two alleged traffickers. In Gambia , in
May, it was reported that 400 women were arrested, many
of them from other West African countries. A police
spokesman said, "We are going to screen all of them.
Those who committed crimes or are illegal immigrants
will face the law and the operation will be extended
countrywide." In Cambodia in August,
anti-trafficking workers were horrified that 14 young
Vietnamese women they perceived as trafficking victims
were arrested, tried and found “guilty of illegal
immigration, ruling that they be expelled to Vietnam
after serving jail terms of two to three
months”.
Another disturbing aspect of
anti-trafficking discourse is the persistence of belief
in its most horrific manifestations, even when there is
no evidence to support such beliefs. Twelve days ago
police in Glasgow, acting on repeated claims that the
brothels of the city are full of trafficked women,
raided eight premises. These raids involved 150 police
officers and 20 immigration officers – more than 20
law-enforcement personnel per venue – which must have
been extremely frightening for the targets of the raids.
Despite this massive expenditure of law-enforcement
resources, only nine women were described as having
entered the country illegally (yet to be tested in
court), and Glasgow police stated that they had
“uncovered no evidence that women are being trafficked
or held against their will in saunas” . However, a
spokesperson for Routes Out of Prostitution was not
convinced, saying "We do not know what is going on
behind closed doors. For all we know, there could be
juveniles and women being coerced to
work."
DEMAND FOR COMMERCIAL SEX:
CLIENTS
The evidence linking violence against sex
workers to the criminalization of sex work, and the
evidence that anti-trafficking strategies are not
producing the expected results, may be driving the
current strong focus of abolitionist feminism on
criminalizing the demand for commercial sex. The Swedes,
with their interesting history of judicial castrations
and sterilizations, have shown the way, and there are
vociferous demands in the rest of Europe for states to
follow the Swedish example.
The argument for
criminalizing clients is largely based on assertions
that sex work is intrinsically abusive, and on the
implicit recognition that commercial sex, like other
areas of economic activity, behaves like a market: if
demand for a product is cut off, supply ceases. This
was the rationale behind the Kerb Crawlers
Rehabilitation Programme in West Yorkshire, from 1998 to
1999.This initiative was strongly opposed by several sex
work projects, for a number of reasons, but it was
abandoned because, after the pilot period, West
Yorkshire police withdrew their support. Their
evaluation cited dispersal of street soliciting to other
areas, and minimal impact despite considerable costs .
Although only Southampton has tried this approach since
the West Yorkshire experiment – and after a couple of
years it does not appear to have had much impact on
street sex work in the city, several other places in the
UK have pursued aggressive anti-client policing, using
the anti-kerb crawling legislation. However, sex work
projects have found that the immediate impact on sex
workers of reducing the numbers of clients is to reduce
their earnings. This can lead to higher levels of
violence, with sex workers working longer hours, later
at night, and in more dangerous areas to try to
compensate for reduced business. A recent survey of 118
women conducted for a Channel 4 documentary found that,
when clients were in short supply as a result of police
crackdowns: 65% worked more hours, 40% worked 'a lot
more' hours. 71% worked later into the night than usual;
53% spent less time checking out punters before getting
in a car; 24% agreed to sexual acts that they wouldn't
normally - like anal sex or sex without a condom. 66%
said they earned less money, as a result of police
crackdowns. Of those around a quarter (20%) were beaten
up by partners or pimps as a direct result. Despite
the evidence that targeting clients does not help sex
workers, attacking “demand” seems popular. A number of
attitudes and opinions aired within these seminars have
expressed distaste or even disgust for commercial sexual
exchanges, even where no violence or coercion is
imputed, which indicates that the unpleasant aspects of
sexuality are those most often associated with
commercial sex.
This is not the picture that I
gained from the questionnaires we collected from clients
in Birmingham in the late 1980s , nor from numerous
conversations with sex workers over the past 15 years.
It is perfectly possible that the reasons clients give
for buying sex are somewhat different these days, but
the demographic profile of clients does not seem to have
changed greatly. A study of 45 men attending a
rehabilitation course for kerb-crawlers in Southampton
(Shell et al, 2001) , found that 65% were married or
living with a partner, and 82% were employed. In
Birmingham in 1989, we found that 66% had partners, and
87% were employed. Age distribution was also very
similar.
Age range of clients, Southampton
(2000/1) and Birmingham (1988/9)
Age group of
clients Southampton 2000/2001 n=45 Birmingham
1988/1989 n=126 20 – 29 21% 21% 30 – 49 50%
50% 50 or older 25% 28% Age range of sample 18 –
69 19 - 80
This remarkable similarity in
demographic variables, between two groups of clients
studied in different cities and 12 years apart in time,
suggests that clients may have some predictable
characteristics, which may include their motivations for
seeking commercial sex.
On three different
surveys in Birmingham, 85 -90% of commercial sexual
services involved vaginal or oral sex or masturbation.
Therefore the bulk of the demand for commercial sex
could not be defined as bizarre or deviant or as
demonstrating theoretically treatable sexual
dysfunction. In our main survey of sex workers, in which
258 women were asked to report on services given to
clients on the last day worked – a total of 1157
interactions – none involved the sex worker being tied
up or beaten, although a few reported that the client
wanted to be tied up or beaten. On the survey where
clients were asked to give their reasons for seeking
commercial sex (n=126), they were far more likely to say
that the attraction of the sexual encounter with a sex
worker was the fact that the sex worker was in control
of the interaction than the opposite.
The most
frequently stated reasons for seeking commercial sex
were the wish to avoid emotional involvement (47%) and
lack of sex (42%), or not enough of it (30%), in
non-commercial relationships. Other reasons given
included: wanting a sexual experience not available from
private partners – usually stated as oral sex (26%);
shyness (21%); liking sex workers and enjoying their
company (19%); wish for variety (15%); wanting an
alternative to masturbation (9%), and loneliness or old
age (4%).
Personally, I do not find these
explanations shocking or offensive. Perhaps in common
with other heterosexual women, I have found men’s
ability to detach their sexual behaviour from their
emotions annoying or disappointing at times, but I do
not think this facility is criminal or deviant, nor is
it confined to men. Nor is it the whole story. At the
last seminar we considered whether the concept of the
“contract of mutual indifference” had anything to
contribute to our understanding of commercial sex. While
“lack of emotional involvement” was cited by 47% of the
group surveyed in 1989, 53% did not give reasons of this
kind, and 19% stated positively that they liked sex
workers and enjoyed their company. In 1992, a researcher
for a television programme persuaded one woman to keep a
log of her customers over a short period, including
reporting on the clients’ attitudes and her own feelings
about her clients. I remember the researcher being quite
disappointed at the low levels of abuse and discomfort
she recorded. Her remarks about her clients
included:
(he treated me) very well, with lots of
consideration and respect. I think he is a lonely man as
I have never heard him talk about friends,
etc.
(he was) kind and considerate and easily
pleased. He said although he loves his wife very much,
he sometimes needs a little change – this is the best
way without hurting feelings.
(he was) very, very
lonely. He wanted more than he wanted to pay for. I
personally think he just wanted my company – female
company. (This client was a 29 year old
widower).
In all, over a 16 day period, she
recorded 50 customers. Half of the days/nights worked
she describes as “good”, because she has done good
business, hasn’t been hassled by the police, and hasn’t
experienced verbal abuse. The bad nights are those when
she hasn’t made enough money because of too much police
activity or too much competition: on only three of the
“bad nights” was a customer verbally abusive or not
wanting to pay.
Admittedly, this is just a 16 day
period in one woman’s working life. Obviously some
clients are abusive towards sex workers – I have
researched the question of violence against sex workers
myself – but this example suggests that selfishness,
sadism and exploitation are not ubiquitous or even
frequent characteristics of clients’ behaviour towards
sex workers. It also shows that sex workers are neither
routinely indifferent to their clients, nor disgusted by
them.
PERSONAL TESTIMONIES
The above
example contrasts with the personal testimonies from
former sex workers that are routinely paraded in front
of abolitionist gatherings to recount their horrific
experiences. Personal testimony is characteristic of
revivalist evangelical gatherings, where it is used as a
tool of emotional manipulation. It consists in turning
personal suffering or wickedness into performance art.
In the context of religion I find it repugnant, and in
the context of attempting to develop public policy on
sex work, completely inappropriate. While I do not doubt
that some experience their involvement in sex work in
the ways we have heard so frequently described, I know
numerous others that experience and/or conceptualize
their involvement in sex work quite differently. This is
one reason why I dislike and distrust reliance on
“personal testimony” instead of objective research or
collective demands, since by its very nature, personal
testimony privileges certain voices above others. I also
think it is open to abuse, since it is very evident that
women who are willing to testify in this way are given
rewards, sympathy and protection which are not available
to women that have a different story to tell.
I
think it is significant that personal testimony is such
an important tool in abolitionist tactics. The parallels
with revivalist religion include emotional manipulation
and hysteria, as well as the framing of conflicting
ideas as a battle between the ‘good’ – those who accept
a set of unverifiable statements/beliefs about god/sex
work, and the ‘evil’ – those who don’t.
THE
NATURE OF ABOLITION
I contend that abolitionist
strategies and theories ignore and demean women,
increase their exposure to violence and abuse, and
blatantly serve the interests of rich and powerful
states against the interests of poor and vulnerable
individuals. I also have concerns over some the
“evidence” cited, and over tactics adopted to discredit
opponents.
Earlier this year, I saw Professor
Donna Hughes’ report to the US government House
Committee on International Relations , attacking various
governments for “complicity” in trafficking. On page
three of this presentation is a table extracted from a
TAMPEP report to which I contributed figures about
numbers of non-UK sex workers thought to be working in
this country in early 1999 . The figures given by Donna
Hughes were the reverse of those I had sent to TAMPEP –
e.g. Nottingham reported that 100% of the women they
worked with were UK citizens: Hughes reported that 100%
were “foreign”.
I drew Professor Hughes’
attention to this error. She blamed TAMPEP, alleging
that the data they had published contained this mistake,
but although I have been told that TAMPEP’s presentation
of these figures was a little confusing, it seems they
did give the data I had collected correctly. I was
prepared to believe in cock-up rather than conspiracy,
but looking at what Hughes had presented more closely, I
realized that she had omitted the figures I had given
for the London area, the only place in the country where
projects were reporting significant numbers of non-UK
citizens amongst their client group at that time. Since
Hughes had reversed the percentages for the other
cities, if she had done this for the London area, it
would have appeared there were significantly fewer
migrant sex workers in the capital than anywhere else in
the country. The fact that these figures were omitted
from her table indicates to me, at best, a deliberate
intention to use only figures that appeared helpful to
her thesis.
After I had drawn Professor Hughes’
attention to these errors, she issued a correction,
graciously confirming that though my 1999 figures were
correct (I would not have said ‘correct’, only that this
was the information available to me), but also asserting
that by 2002, over 80% of sex workers in London were
migrant women , most trafficked and half under the age
of 18 , and that sex workers were now being trafficked
into provincial cities in the UK. The references she
cited for these claims were two newspaper articles and a
conversation with a London police officer. This is not
what I regard as compelling evidence.
However,
incorrect and poor data is not the most disturbing
aspect of this saga. Hughes’ report to the US House
Committee on International Relations also listed a
number of individuals and organizations that she claimed
were misusing US funds. She stated that they “advocate
for the acceptance and legalization of prostitution, and
fail to assist victims of trafficking, even when they
come in contact with them.”
TAMPEP wrote to
Hughes, protesting at her misuse of their information,
and in that letter they praise the work of La Strada, an
anti-trafficking organization in the Netherlands, which
Hughes listed as misusing US funding because they only
oppose “forced prostitution”, and argue for legalization
to promote sex workers’ rights. Hughes did not reply to
Tampep’s letter, but they did receive a response from
one of her supporters, as follows:
to:
licia brussa TAMPEP amsterdam, the
netherlands:
i am writing after having seen your
letter to donna hughes in which you indicate that groups
with which you are associated will "take steps" against
her for her brave and steadfast opposition to the
worldwide legalization of prostitution for which you
appear to stand. i dare you and your fellow groups to
try to do so. better still, i urge you and your
colleagues to take on other members of our u.s.
coalition (including me) who are determined, in your
words, to "blacklist" you from funding and from any
vestige of moral or operational credibility. we would
welcome such an effort on your part to "take steps"
against us, and are confident that it would help
publicly expose your counterproductive efforts that, in
our view, have helped metasticize the growing and bloody
epidemic of international sex trafficking. it might
even, in a few instances, expose financial ties between
some prolegalization organizations in europe and the
trafficking mafias who profit from their (and your)
efforts.
i am writing to let you know that there
is a growing movement in the united states -- one i have
no doubt will succeed -- that is determined to limit,
indeed, eradicate the dreadful influence you and your
affiliated groups have had on the slavery issue of our
time: the annual trafficking of as many as two million
women and children each year into sexual bondage. i
strongly take issue with your claim that you have served
the interests of such vulnerable victims and, as
indicated, believe that you and your colleagues have
been major forces for promoting today's fastest growing
area of international crime. your premise -- that the
pimps and mafias who enslave millions can, with proper
regulation, become career counsellors, or that "sex
work" is capable of becoming an "empowering" career
option for women -- is no more credible than were your
19th century counterparts who believed that improving
health conditions on ships carrying african chattel
slaves, or passing laws that limited the number of
whippings that could be administered to such slaves
would improve the tragic lots of slave-trafficked
africans. fortunately, the anti-trafficking law passed
by the u.s. congress rejected your views, and those of
us who helped pass it are working -- with limited
success to date but with complete optimism for the
future -- to implement the law's anti-legalization
mandates.
we're ready to have at it with groups
like yours. i and others in the u.s. and the third world
look forward to taking you on with all that have,
believing as we do that success in eliminating the
influence of groups like yours is a first and critical
step towards ending the scandal and scourge of today's
epidemic sex trafficking.
michael horowitz
hudson institute washington d.c.
In
case anyone wonders what on earth Tampep said in their
letter to Donna Hughes to elicit this extraordinary
response, I have included their letter as an Appendix,
and have printed off a copy of their position paper on
Migration and Sex Work.
It is obvious from this
insulting and abusive letter that anyone who argues for
legalization of sex work is likely to have their
credibility and funding attacked. Amongst the other
individuals and organizations named by Hughes
are: Penelope Saunders (Executive Director, Different
Avenues, Washington, DC), who seems to have offended by
calling child prostitution "young people involved in the
sex industry”, and for being “part of the movement to
normalize adults having sex with children”. Saunders is
also criticized for using the phrase “sex for favors” in
relation to some research she did in Australia. I have
checked the paper in which Saunders is alleged to seek
to “normalize sex with children”. Nowhere does she
attempt any such thing. The paper is a serious and
extensively referenced analysis of the factors that
contribute to young people’s involvement in sex work;
“sex for favours” was a term she used in interviews with
young people who did not associate their own experiences
with “prostitution” or “sex work”, and one which she
explicitly states is not appropriate for situations of
child abuse, she states - “I am in agreement with
the ILO that cases which involve very young children or
clearly involve physical and sexual abuse are more
accurately described as "commercialized child sexual
abuse" rather than prostitution, sex work or 'sex for
favors'.”
The seriousness of the
misrepresentation of Saunders’ work should, I think, be
of enormous concern to any academic, no matter what
their views on sex work. Similarly, I think that any
feminist should feel huge concern about the implications
of Hughes’ condemnation of Ann Jordan, of the
International Human Rights Law Group (US), whom she
quotes as saying, To those who feel their moral
hackles rising at the prospect [of legalized
prostitution]: “We don’t support a woman’s right to
choose because we think abortion is a great thing, but
because we believe fundamentally that women should have
control over their own reproductive capacity. The same
argument can be made for prostitution. Women who decide
for whatever reason to sell sex should have the right to
control their own body-and should be assured of basic
protection on the job. As with abortions, we can dream
of a day when sex work is safe, legal, and rare.” It
appears that Hughes has chosen this quote because it
shows that Ann Jordan is a supporter of safe, legalized
abortion. This suggests that Hughes is appealing to the
anti-abortion lobby in the USA to support her crusade.
The alliance between abolitionists like Donna Hughes
and right-wing Christian groups in the USA and elsewhere
is particularly ominous in relation to HIV prevention.
Not only are some of the poorest nations of the world
suffering from extensive economic, social and political
chaos, arguably as a result of western political and
economic agendas, but HIV/AIDS is threatening whole
nations. US international aid is of huge importance in
these areas. In the USA itself, many areas have no HIV
prevention education except that which is “abstinence
based” Few places have needle and syringe exchange
schemes. One might think it was government policy to
allow whole sections of their undesirable population to
die. And they do. Possibly this seminar series ought to
have considered Malthus as well as Hobbes and Locke. On
the international level, the potential effects of this
right-wing stranglehold on HIV prevention are extremely
serious. Bush withdrew funds to international family
planning organizations that offer terminations on his
first day in office, and HIV harm-minimization
programmes are under threat.
Organizations known
in my field for the excellent work they do in HIV
prevention, such as the Durbar Mahila Samanvay Committee
(DMSC) of Sonagachi (Kolkata, India), Empower in
Thailand, and even the highly respected international
aid organization, Medecins Sans Frontieres are condemned
by Hughes for supporting legalization of sex work and
promoting sex workers’ rights. Also, proposals before
USAID, one of the largest donors to HIV programmes
worldwide, make a clear threat to these organisations’
funding by suggesting that “Organizations advocating
prostitution as an employment choice or which advocate
or support the legalization of prostitution are not
appropriate partners for USAID anti-trafficking
activities”.
Sex workers’ rights feminists like
myself argue that sex workers’ legal status has direct
influence on the extent to which they suffer from stigma
and discrimination, and this in turn affects their
access to sexual health services and their risks for
infection. These are just a few examples of the evidence
that is available to support our position:
The
DMSC project in India, condemned by Hughes, found that
strategies which increased sex workers’ social capital –
their integration in their communities – also increased
their collective ability to negotiate safer sex with
clients. These activities included “community meetings,
fairs, and protests; decreasing perceived powerlessness
through capacity building work-shops; increasing access
and control over material resources via microcredit and
cooperative banking; increasing social participation
through autonomous, self-governing sex work
organizations; and facilitating social acceptance of sex
workers by involving the sex industry and civil society
stakeholders in program activities.” They found “a
statistically significant association between consistent
condom use and beliefs and behaviors indicative of
social integration and participation, or ‘social
capital’. For example, sex workers who were members of a
sex worker organization and who voted freely in the last
election were significantly more likely to report
consistent condom use.”
These findings are
reflected in results from a project adopting a similar
approach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, which found that
“women who felt a sense of support and cohesion from
other sex workers were ten times more likely to report
consistent condom use with clients in the last four
months than those women who scored low on this measure”
.
Researchers in Australia reported that, “In
one Australian study carried out in 1998, the prevalence
of sexually transmitted bacterial infections was 80
times greater in 63 illegal street prostitutes than in
753 of their legal brothel counterparts. All the illegal
street prostitutes with infections were in the group who
had not been screened for infections in the past 3
months, whereas none of those screened in the last 3
months were infected.”
This is not about
ensuring a healthy supply of sex workers for the benefit
of disgusting men: it is about saving the lives of sex
workers themselves, but it seems abolitionists would
rather see dead sex workers than legal ones.
I
therefore contend that abolitionism has nothing to do
with feminism. It is the stuff of hysteria, witch hunts
and totalitarianism. It is willing to distort research,
misrepresent data, and attack perceived opponents on the
flimsiest of evidence. It is brimful of the
fetishization of suffering, prepared to exploit and
exhibit the abuse that others have suffered to promote
its own political advantage, and to expose the very
people they claim to support to fear, humiliation,
violence and preventable death.
A century ago
feminists of my grandmothers’ generation could have
advanced the argument – I believe some did – that
marriage was an institution that in and of itself
constituted abuse of women: it allowed physical and
sexual violence against women, viciously restricted
women’s freedoms and rights; at best it defined women in
terms of their husbands’ status, at worst it defined
women as men’s chattels. Yet reform was directed at
legal change to secure women’s equality and rights, not
towards the abolition of marriage. Some of us may still
doubt the necessity or value or marriage, but on the
whole western marriage cannot be defined as
intrinsically abusive. I believe a similar approach is
needed towards sex work.
Hilary
Kinnell Beyond Contract Seminar Series 16th
December 2002.
The following comments are
owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible
for what they say.
comment by Red Hughs
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, May 20 2003 @ 12:48 PM
PDT
Hmm,
Interesting how this
article comes from the position that "the commodification of
everything else is OK, so why shouldn't sex be commodified".
I would certainly approach things from the perspective that
commodification, in general, is not OK, it's an axis of
dehumanization.
I would still personally say that focusing
on the commodification of sex versus the commodification of free
time still is simply a matter of sexual repression. But it's worth
see how much of the debate over sex-work seems to be between people
who accept work in general.
Still, I wouldn't want that to
detract from the author main useful message: that empowering
sex-workers is the only effective way to encourage safe-sex.
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, May 20 2003 @ 01:54 PM
PDT
The other factor complicating this
issue is globalization. Most of the countries that had the most
progressive laws regarding sex workers have ended up becoming havens
for the exploitation of ex-soviet bloc youth who are exported to the
wealthy west like so many boxes of cabbages. Like everything else
now, problems of local oppression have to be addressed along with
global oppression.
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, May 20 2003 @ 02:30 PM
PDT
Cogent point. Lukas Moodysson, who
made the movies "Fucking Amal" and "Together" just made a movie
about that very phenomena (eastern bloc women exported to western
nations to work in the liberalized sex trade) called Lilja 4-Ever.
It isn't open yet, but in an interview with the UK Guardian,
Moodysson said:
"He tells me that he was 'radicalised' by the
anti-capitalist riots in Gothenberg in 2001. 'I always felt that I
fitted into society until that moment', he elaborates, 'The sight of
Social Democratic Party members handing out red roses to the police
who had beaten people, and harassed people, and almost killed one
person made me realise that I was in opposition. Maybe I was blind
before but, suddenly, I felt once again like the outsider I was at
16.'
This epiphany is crucial in understanding Moodysson's
shift away from satirical, but essentially soft-centred filmmaking,
to a more political style. With Lilya 4-Ever, he seems determined to
prove that he is Sweden's answer to his acknowledged influence Ken
Loach, albeit with a Christian as well as a socialist soul, creating
a narrative that moves forward with grim inexorability to its
depressing conclusion."
Anyway, take what you will, I guess
this is off-topic.
http://film.guardian.co.uk/interview/interviewpages/0,6737,935532,00.html
Interesting how this article comes from the position that "the commodification of everything else is OK, so why shouldn't sex be commodified".
I would certainly approach things from the perspective that commodification, in general, is not OK, it's an axis of dehumanization.
I would still personally say that focusing on the commodification of sex versus the commodification of free time still is simply a matter of sexual repression. But it's worth see how much of the debate over sex-work seems to be between people who accept work in general.
Still, I wouldn't want that to detract from the author main useful message: that empowering sex-workers is the only effective way to encourage safe-sex.
Best Wishes,
Red