Pages
Recent postings- Murder of human rights activist Natalia Estemirova condemned
- Three publications from AWID’s Resisting and Challenging Religious Fundamentalisms
- Rabbanit? Rabbah? Maybe just plain Rabbi? What should be the title of an Orthodox woman who happens to also be a rabbi?
- Inquiry urged after Sudan women flogged for wearing trousers
- Accountability To Women Could Upset Business As Usual
- Fight Sexism to Help Young Mothers – South Africa
- Soldiers Who Rape, Commanders Who Condone: Sexual Violence and Military Reform in the Democratic Republic of Congo
- Worrying increase in gang rape say police in Angola
- Repatriation of Rwandan Women Refugees in Uganda could increase hardships
- HRW condemns Rwanda’s draft law on HIV tests and sterilisation
Gender Wire- Q&A: Women's Demands on Land Rights
- RIGHTS-UGANDA : Women Press for Domestic Violence Bill
- AFRICA: Organic Farming Could be Answer to Food Insecurity
- EDUCATION: Mother Tongue Absent in Thousands of Classrooms
- Q&A: 'Farmers Can Gain From Crisis'
- DR-CONGO: Rape by Regular Army a Growing Problem, HRW Says
- PERU: Going to School Still a Feat for Rural Girls
- CUBA: What Schools Can and Cannot Do for Equality
- FILM: Graphically Condemning a "Barbaric and Horrific Punishment"
- ECONOMY: Accountability To Women Could Upset Business-As-Usual
new on womensgrid- Sense of Self – A weekly support group for women focusing on enhancing self-esteem and self-confidence! 20th July 2009
- Dogs Trust seeks dog foster carers to help women fleeing domestic violence
- Soroptimists give £500,000 and three houses to charity in Gravesend
- A report into the death of Baby P has revealed that only half of NHS staff have the required levels of training in child protection
- One in four in custody in Glasgow held for domestic abuse
- Royal Assent for Sexual Offences Bill Scotland
- Unionists and nationalists have joined forces to round on English politicians who called for abortion laws to be extended to Northern Ireland
- Human rights court will hear Irish abortion ban case
- Teenagers who are raped leave school at earlier age study in Ireland finds
- Two boys who raped a 14-year-old for insulting their gang leader’s partner have had their sentences upheld
new on women in london- 4 vacancies - Refuge - 28th July 2009
- Female Community Outreach Officer - Kiran - 14th August 2009
- Volunteer Co-ordinator - Jewish Women’s Aid - 10th August 2009
- 2 vacancies - Eaves - 17th and 22nd July 2009
- Public investment in childcare : who cares, who pays? - Daycare Trust - 17th November 2009
- Feminism in London - conference organised by London Feminist Network - 10th October 2009
- GLDVP Newsletter - July 2009
- GLDVP Stella Project advanced training for experienced workers - 6th August and 8th September 2009
- Being a mum has ‘devastating’ impact on earnings - new report - Fawcett
- The GLDVP response to: The Way Forward – A call for action to end violence against women
WiL Calendars
WiL e-groups
Women in London
-
Blog Stats
- 230,507 hits
Meta
a
- *** ISSUE *** (1342)
- Abortion Contraception (125)
- BME (19)
- Childbirth Pregnancy (51)
- Children Parenting (99)
- Climate Environment (16)
- Disability (2)
- Domestic Violence (218)
- Education (32)
- Employment Work (67)
- Equality (131)
- Faith (91)
- Family Marriage Partnership (58)
- Feminism (63)
- Financial (33)
- Funding (44)
- Gender Mainstreaming (67)
- Government (324)
- Health (73)
- HIV/AIDS (85)
- Housing (9)
- Human Rights (58)
- IWD (31)
- Legal Police (145)
- Lesbian Gay (16)
- Media (39)
- Men Against VAW (7)
- Peace Pacifism (19)
- Pornography (27)
- Poverty (10)
- Prostitution (135)
- Racism (7)
- Rape and Sexual Assault (198)
- Refugee (22)
- Trafficking (93)
- Violence Against Women (246)
- War Conflict (108)
- WLM / Feminist History (14)
- Women's Group (269)
- *** REGION or COUNTRY *** (1334)
- Africa (262)
- Asia (217)
- Australasia (71)
- Eire (13)
- England (219)
- Eastern (9)
- London (78)
- Midlands East (7)
- Midlands West (5)
- North East (4)
- North West (15)
- South East (7)
- South West (7)
- Yorkshire and Humberside (16)
- Europe (125)
- Global (120)
- Middle East (124)
- North America (162)
- Northern Ireland (23)
- Scotland (31)
- South America (70)
- Wales (49)
- *** TYPE *** (352)
- Appeal (9)
- Arts Event (6)
- Awards or Nominations (12)
- Benefit (6)
- Campaign (60)
- Consultations (12)
- Demonstration March (12)
- Obituaries (2)
- Opinion Comment (65)
- Publication (57)
- Research (47)
- Vacancies (34)
- Women's Event (50)
- womensphere admin (11)
- womensphere indexes (3)
- *** ISSUE *** (1342)
Archives
Female sex workers emerge out of the shadows at AIDS conference in Mexico
11 August 2008 in HIV/AIDS, Opinion Comment, South America
Female sex workers have emerged from the shadows at this year’s AIDS conference in Mexico, strutting their stuff loudly and proudly, demanding consultation in HIV policy, and refusing to be labelled victims.
For the first time ever, a female sex worker addressed a plenary session, and Elena Reynaga, who represents sex workers in Argentina, wasn’t asking for help to get the girls off the street; she was asking that they be allowed to work in safe environments where they can make a living without getting killed or beaten.
Women who enter into sex work by choice, she said, were tired of HIV programmes offering them alternative income earners in a bid to get them out of the profession. “We don’t want to sew, we don’t want to knit, we don’t want to cook,” she said.
At a stand advocating for the rights of US sex workers in the conference’s Global Village, one young Thai woman said she had had it with the stereotypes that came with being an Asian sex worker in the States.
“The idea is that we are all doe-eyed victims of human trafficking who need rescuing, but for many of us that is so far from the truth,” she said. “We just want to be recognised as workers like any other.”
It’s an idea that many feminists and policy makers will find hard to stomach, but according to the sex workers, recognising their right to work would go a long way towards making their work safer.
Relying on morality for guidance on public health issues can be problematic, and the failure of many governments to include sex workers in their national AIDS prevention strategies has increased their HIV risk and the risk they pose to the general population.
According to activists, in places like Kolkata, India, where sex work has been decriminalised and women, men and transgendered people selling sex now have access to public health services, HIV rates among these groups have dropped.
So maybe the best place for sex workers is out of the shadows.
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/f8b475091dcd59bb2064737f60e37f93.htm