Sweet Emily J 172062 Report post Posted May 7, 2016 [B]NY Times: Should Prostitution Be a Crime?[/B] [I]A growing movement of sex workers and activists is making the decriminalization of sex work a feminist issue.[/I] By EMILY BAZELONMAY 5, 2016 [URL]http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/08/magazine/should-prostitution-be-a-crime.html[/URL] [QUOTE] [I]Last November, Meg Muñoz went to Los Angeles to speak at the annual West Coast conference of Amnesty International. She was nervous. Three months earlier, at a meeting attended by about 500 delegates from 80 countries, Amnesty [URL="http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/01/world/europe/amnesty-international-weighs-decriminalization-of-prostitution.html"]voted[/URL] to adopt a proposal in favor of the â??[URL="https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2015/08/global-movement-votes-to-adopt-policy-to-protect-human-rights-of-sex-workers/"]full decriminalization of consensual sex work[/URL],â? sparking a storm of controversy. Members of the human rights group in [URL="http://www.thelocal.no/20150812/amnesty-norway-voted-against-sex-work"]Norway[/URL] and [URL="http://www.thelocal.se/20150813/swedes-reject-amnesty-in-protest-of-sex-vote"]Sweden[/URL] resigned en masse, saying the organizationâ??s goal should be to end demand for prostitution, not condone it. Around the world, on social media and in the press, opponents blasted Amnesty. In Los Angeles, protesters ringed the lobby of the Sheraton where the conference was being held, and as Muñoz tried to enter, a woman confronted her and became upset as Muñoz explained that, as a former sex worker, she supported Amnestyâ??s position. â??She agreed to respect my time at the microphone,â? Muñoz told me. â??That didnâ??t exactly happenâ? â?? the woman and other critics yelled out during her panel â?? â??but I understand why it was so hard for her.â? [/I][I]Muñoz was in the middle of a pitched battle over the terms, and even the meaning, of sex work. In the United States and around the globe, many sex workers (the term activists prefer to â??pr0stituteâ?) are trying to change how they are perceived and policed. They are fighting the legal status quo, social mores and also mainstream feminism, which has typically focused on saving women from the sex trade rather than supporting sex workers who demand greater rights. But in the last decade, sex-worker activists have gained new allies. If Amnestyâ??s international board approves a final policy in favor of decriminalization in the next month, it will join forces with public-health organizations that have successfully worked for years with groups of sex workers to halt the spread of H.I.V. and AIDS, especially in developing countries. â??The urgency of the H.I.V. epidemic really exploded a lot of taboos,â? says Catherine Murphy, an Amnesty policy adviser.[/I] [URL="http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/08/magazine/should-prostitution-be-a-crime.html"]Read More...[/URL] [/QUOTE] Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites