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Archive for September, 2009

A Prostitute I am……

I am gay male sex worker and a Pagan I often wonder at the direction our sex worker rights movement is taking and wonder if we are truly engaging with the public and with our own industry. I wonder if we are allowing our enemies to set the agenda to which we try and engage on their terms rather than setting the agenda ourselves. I wonder if we as sex workers fully appreciate our role both historically and spiritually as well as now with in our societies. This short article will I hope remind people a little about where we came from and perhaps inspire us to rediscover our heritage.

A Prostitute I am

“A prostitute I am, compassionate am I”. These words echo their power through the millennia. Powerful and thought provoking they challenge the modern perception of the prostitute as the fallen woman, degraded and abused.

It is a noble image that these words conjure. They were words written on a clay tablet proclaiming the great Goddess who the Christians later identified as the whore of Babylon herself Ishtar. Mother, virgin, and whore. Odd is it not that the three historical defining roles prescribed to women by our patriarchal society should also the three attributes of the archetypal mother Goddess.

Sex was once enjoyed as an act that engaged lovers with the divine. Sex was considered an act of compassion, a benediction and celebration, an act of joy and of procreation. Sex was not perceived as shameful or embarrassing but rather a necessary part of our experience as humans. The prostitute represented the Goddess who through sexual intercourse tamed the God (man) and through the healing nature of lovemaking introduced civilisation to the world. How removed this image is from the prostitute as a figure of degradation and shame that we have today. Shaming the prostitute is controlling the Goddess and therefore literally controlling women. What a paradox then that it is often women who in the name of liberating women who are the most vocal in stigmatising and degrading other women and men; especially those who choose to use their bodies and sex to earn their living.

The idea of the creative Goddess joyfully and with out shame epitomising all of our experiences as humans never mind as women through her equally honouree titles of whore, mother and virgin is odd to many of us today.

The feminine over the centuries has been either ostracised from the divine or corrupted. The Roman Catholic Church for example slowly over the millennia emasculated the feminine into a stereotype of submissive femininity through Mary the perpetually virginal and yet miraculously a mother and eternally submissive female. The decline of the Goddess as a figure of veneration and the rise of the patriarchy reflects not only an imbalance in our human relationship to the divine but also in our human interactions to each other and even in our relationship to the earth itself. This is evident in our societal need for and yet at the same time revulsion for sexual imagery and illicit sexual contact out side imposed societal norms such as marriage. Marriage along side religious injunctions successfully institutionalised patriarchal control by proscribing sex outside of limited boundaries. The result has been that our society confuses sexual liberation with promiscuity and sexual imagery with objectification and the sexual choices of sex workers with institutionalising male abuse .

Our attempts at liberalism have been corrupted by radicalisation which has perverted the original idealism of feminism and sexual freedom. Instead of liberalisation what has evolved is a new interpretation of patriarchy that abuses the power of the state to enforce old societal conformity. This is particularly obvious in the government’s policies towards sex work which deliberately confuses sex work as universally degrading and intrinsically abusive despite evidence to the contrary. The only difference is that previously sex workers were to be saved because they were fallen and corrupted while now they are victims.

Sex workers are degraded not by their work but by the popular perceptions of their work. In a society that is still so uncomfortable about sex and about our all too human need for sex the sex worker has become the easy scapegoat. As a society we too easily turn to the law to censor and criminalise our perceived moral failings instead of accepting that sex and sexual imagery is not dangerous or undesirable just our interpretations.

Our role as sex workers and as activists is to challenge those perceived interpretations and to engage with society to encourage the rediscovery of true sexual liberation which is not an excuse for easy, casual sex but rather the intellectualisation of sex which means the rediscovery of sex as a positive force with in our individual lives and with in society. This means engaging our enemies not on their terms but on ours. It is not only our enemies we have to confront but ourselves and our industry. We cannot just demand rights if we do not know what we would do with those rights.

I have seen little debate about what we as sex workers really want from our industry and what our industry could become and what we can give to society in order to earn the respect we deserve. If we are to return to our former position of respect sex workers themselves must decide if they are worthy to be accepted. This means redefining our roles not just as labour which seems to be the catchall trendy phrase that has particularly captured the imagination of the left but also means reinventing our role with in the fabric of a healthy and open; free society. Challenging our own definition of ourselves as just workers providing a service is vital if our argument for rights is to be successful and our importance as sex workers is to be recognised with in our society. Emphasising just one definition of our potential fails to truly challenge societies definition of us and it also fails to realise our full potential as sex workers and limits our argument to actually rediscover and re define our historical roles as teachers, carers and perhaps as sexual and social revolutionaries.

Our enemies deliberately confuse our choices with their prejudices and their fears because we allow them to.

Engaging the public to confound our enemies is not easy but is necessary. We have to create a medium in which the institutionalisation of abuse created by the criminalisation of our choices is clearly recognisable as just that, abuse; not just to us but to our society in general. We have to show the joy our work brings to the many thousands who are the elderly, the sick, the lonely as well as those just seeking sexual joy for its own sake.

We have to challenge the patriarchal, monotheistic culture that has distorted our relationship with the divine and with each other. The patriarchal social structures for centuries shamed all of us as sexual beings and stopped us from celebrating our sexual creativity and our sexual diversity.

Rediscovering our true potential which was captured so explicitly in those words written so long ago, “A prostitute I am compassionate am I” is vital in our battle for our rights. If as sex worker activists we do not understand the words written on that clay tablet so long ago then we will continue to fail and that would be a pity on so many levels for not only us but for our society.

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A couple of weeks ago in my blog I mentioned that there were a couple of us floozies attending a meeting which I didn’t want to say too much about. Well, it took place last night and all I can say is it was the biggest eye opener I’ve had for a long time. It was a debate entitled “Give prostitution the red light ?” In short, it was a discussion about the possible implementation of a law making it illegal for a man to pay for sex. It was chaired by Alex Bell and had as panelists :

Bill Skelly : HM Inspectorate of Constabulary for Scotland
Catherine Stephens : A working girl and an activist with the International Union of Sex Workers
Julie Bindel : Feminist and Guardian journalist
Roger Matthews : Professor of Criminology in London
Margo MacDonald MSP was also due to attend but unfortunately had to cancel.

The only escorts to attend were myself, Highland Amanda and Melanie Head-Girl. We were very, very nervous and sought the organiser’s guarantees that there would be no press present at the debate. As soon as we entered the auditorium we were greeted with flashing bulbs which set me on edge, but it was a photographer for the Equality and Human Rights Commission and having been introduced to us all was well.

As soon as the debate opened, I could see the direction it was going to take. It was very much geared towards street workers and the problems they face on a daily basis, which nobody will deny are abhorrent and should never have to endured by any woman. The entire room was in agreement that trafficking can and must be eradicated in all it’s forms, but Melanie made a very valuable point. Aside from the obvious influx of trafficked women in the UK at present, we also have a large number of migrant sex workers. These women are here by choice, all one has to do is visit any London escort agency gallery to see the large variety of Eastern European women advertised. Does this fact colour the statistics for trafficked women ?

Roger Matthews spoke about his findings in research he did, however it soon became apparent that his research was dated and also solely based on street workers.

Bill Skelly spoke about the policing aspect and I must admit I was very impressed with his perspective. His main concern was harm to the person, be they a street worker, client or any other classification of person you care to name.

Catherine Stephens was in short, wonderful. In many respects she was like a tasty morsel thrown to the lions and I thought she held her composure and answered even the most ridiculous of questions with a degree of dignity that would put a Royal to shame.

The self-appointed star of the show was Julie Bindel. Familiar though I am with her opinions and her self satisfied universal declarations, nothing could have prepared me for the vitriolic rants she subjected the audience to. She referred to the sex industry as a “despicable industry” to begin with. One could say the same of journalists, but there we are. This is also the woman who referred to The Netherlands as a “cesspit”. As Bill Skelly quite rightly pointed out, I’m sure they’ll be thrilled with that description.

Catherine Stephens quite rightly pointed out that she has been working for nine years and thoroughly enjoys her job. Yes, there are bad days and there are idiots, but on the whole she feels no regret for entering her chosen profession. Julie Bindel on the other hand, views such ladies as deluded victims. She said that there can be no differentiation between the desperate drug addicted woman on the street and your average “happy hooker”. How obscene.

You see, I agree with Catherine on one crucial point, when attempting to pass any legislation, due consideration must be given to all aspects of the industry concerned. It’s simply not acceptable to allude to the fact that we are all victims, that we have all been subjected to some form of mass delusion. As Catherine quite rightly pointed out, we are the invisible women. We are not the desperate, pimped and drug addicted women that you may come into contact with in an Accident and Emergency environment. Neither are we the “£10,000 a night coke fuelled romp” ladies that the press love to report. No, we are ordinary, decent, hard working ladies who are also mothers, daughters, sisters, friends and lovers. In the mind of Julie Bindel, we do not exist.

In short, why does a man hating, political feminist feel she is suitably qualified to pass judgement on heterosexual women ? It simply doesn’t make sense to me. As part of her speech last night she also alluded to the fact that she speaks for feminists everywhere. That is quite simply a complete fabrication. There are many feminists who celebrate the empowerment of women to make the choice to enter the sex industry, as can be seen here : http://www.harlots-parlour.com/

Finally, I would like to ask Bill Skelly, if the current proposal does become law, how on earth do the police propose to enforce it at our level in the industry ? Are they going to intercept escorts and their clients leaving the country at airports ? I was quite incensed to learn that under the current legislation, my leaving the country with Mr F recently for Spain qualifies as trafficking. What a farce. I have the greatest of difficulties at times in controlling myself, let alone anyone else stepping up to the task.

Julie Bindel at least had the good grace to acknowledge the fact that there is still a lot of stigma and social exclusion associated with the industry. The irony is, with bigots like her abounding, it’s not likely to recede any time soon.

Laura Lee

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Originally posted on my personal site. :)

A few months ago, I was sitting with a friend somewhere, listening to her complain about a guy, as all good friends must do.

“I’m going to go live on an island,” she said. “A civilized one. Indoor plumbing. But no men.”

“I’d join you,” I said. “But I like dick too much.”

Suddenly, she started laughing so hard that whatever it was she was drinking briefly threatened to come out of her nose and get all over my shirt. “I’m just picturing your face whenever men say ‘I like pussy too much’ in your presence.”

It’s fair enough to say that I was owned. But her comment did make me wonder about language and body parts and men.

As feminists, we criticize the visual and verbal dissolution of women to mere body parts. Anywhere from advertising billboards to music videos to art photography, women are cut up at rates that men simply aren’t. Is this cause for concern? Yes. I think it’s natural for anyone to focus on a particular body part they might like, but this does get taken to an extreme. It stops being beautiful and starts being downright scary and grotesque – the Whitechapel Murders without the requisite gore.

On the other hand, you find that women who dig men are often just as likely to reduce men to mere body parts as well. We have less social capital than men do, so we don’t feel nearly as entitled about advertising the fact that hey, random dude on the subway at 7 a.m., your ass looks great in those jeans, but we certainly think it, and when we get together with friends, we discuss it.

I also think that women discuss the actual sex they’re having with their female friends much more so than men do. Maybe I just haven’t been around the block enough, but let’s say you’re a guy, anywhere from Dubai to Anchorage, and you’ve just started sleeping with someone new. Are the odds that your best friend is going to go “DUDE, so how tight is it?” high are low? Without speaking for the entirety of the world’s population, it seems to me that these conversations are less common between men.

Men discuss the quality of their women quite a bit – “great tits,” “luscious ass,” “she’s loud in bed,” et cetera – but I don’t think they’re nearly as detail oriented, especially not around other men, especially when discussing individuals. There’s that scene early on in “The 40 Year Old Virgin” when the dudes are all sitting around a card table, talking about the different types of nipples out there. It’s a completely natural conversation, right? But it’s also somewhat abstract. I think that on the average, men are less specific, particularly when it comes to an individual partner.

I feel like women are more detail-oriented, if we’ve decided to have a frank discussion, that is: how does it feel when he does this, how does it feel when he does that, ask him to eat more chocolate, start at the tip, what kind of sound?, etc. Of course, it could just be me and my female friends. The plural of anecdote isn’t data, no matter how colourful.

I’m not going for the whole “men eat Mars bars, women eat Milky Way” (*hah*) angle here. I don’t want to essentialize. After all, one of my favourite descriptions of a female body part was written by a man (Joseph O’Neill in Netherland), though literature is probably a whole other discussion.

My point in all of this is that perhaps the “hey bro, we should get you some pussy” routine among heterosexual men isn’t gender-specific or orientation-specific or threatening, or at least it shouldn’t be. This isn’t to say that it can’t be demeaning – but that it’s demeaning in certain contexts and not really that big of a deal in others. Bottom line is, like my friend said: If I’m going to open my mouth and say “I like dick,” I better be prepared to hear “I like pussy” from somebody else at some point or another.

I know what some of you might say. You might say that all of this sounds so clinical and cold. Sure enough, it does. You might even take a cue from Ariel Levy and call me a female chauvinist pig for speaking like this about my fellow human beings. But just like the Bible says – To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven: A time to be born, and a time to die. a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted; A time to kill, and a time to heal; And, I would add, a time to be a poet and a time to be a pervert.

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THIS WEEK’s revelations in the Daily Telegraph and More 4 news of the disappearance of two-thirds of the migrant sex workers “rescued” in the UK’s ‘Pentameter’ anti-sex trafficking raids comes as no surprise.

The two Pentameter inquisitions, in 2006 and 2008, involved all 55 UK police forces and rendered coituses interuptus from Lands End to John O’Groats, as well as in Ireland. There were some 1,300 raids on premises, largely brothels, but a mere 255 women “rescued” were deemed trafficked – a tiny fragment of the 4,000 supposed sex trafficking victims the Home Office had promised in its dodgy dossier.

Of those 255, only 37 – less than 15 percent – accepted offers of support. Another three dozen returned to their home countries voluntarily, while 16 were deported.

The remaining 166 (65%) refused offers of help and left the police facilities, their whereabouts now unknown.

The Home Office stated that due to the nature of trafficking, “a significant number of victims are unwilling to engage or accept support.”
But their reasons for declining help are controversial…

Read remainder of this post at An Anthology of English Pros

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This has been one of my basic obsessions for many years: how the Left has taken a schzophenic approach to the subject of sexuality and sex work; and how sexual Puritanism and sexual conservatism remains pretty
powerful in containing and devolving efforts to integrate sex worker activism within a broader Left-of-center programme.

This recent post over at the British “Green Left” blog Bronwen Maher in which the author calls on Green Party members to adopt the radical feminist position on sex work favoring “Swedish Model”-style criminalization of sex commerce consumers, is typical of a prevailing attitude amongst certain liberal/progressive/ Left activists that criminalizing sexual activities amongst consensual adults as a means of “protecting” women and children is a viable Leftist goal.

Obviously, as a Leftist myself, a member of the Green Party USA, and a sex-positive feminist supporter who happens to dabble in nonviolent porn and support sex worker rights to maintain their space in a safe, legal, and sane manner, I profoundly disagree with this analysis.

Although I would never, ever deny the darker, more tragic experiences of sex work, or that sex workers do indeed face many dangers as part of their profession, to simply wish away the voices of those who defend their right to their profession and only emphasize those who are most at harm merely to support abolitionist legislation, basically amounts to silencing and privileging some voices more than others. It also tends to mass scapegoating and ultimately persecution of innocent clients and consumers of sex work (scapegoated as “punters”, “pimps”, and “traffickers”) for even expressing a desire to engage in sex for
money rather than focusing on the actual abusers and abusive practices.

There is also the issue of how advocating abolitionist positions distract from the traditional Leftist theory and practice of focusing on institutional forms of inequality (economic and social) which evolve from the role of the State the traditional family, the Church, and the corporate sector in imposing conservative sexual mores and laws restricting or criminalizing sexual behavior not meeting particular restrictive standards of propriety. (“Decency” and “Holiness” and “cleansing fsociety of filth and smut” serves as the usual standard for the religious conservative, while “Patriarchy” and “protecting women and children from male sexual rapicity” serve the standard of most radicalfeminist anti-sex work activists.)

This “Puritan Left” attitude has been reenforced through ringing endorsements from philosophical Left luminaries such as Noam Chomsky, who has been the most recent convert to the most radical antiporn/
antiprostitution activism following an attempt by HUSTLER magazine publisher Larry Flynt to mine his (Flynt’s) antiwar activism.

In the absence of any public organizing from active Leftists who take a more sex-libertarian or anticensorship or sex-positive stance, the abolitionists and “neo-Puritan” Leftists have been enabled to claim hegemony for all of the Left concerning sex work and sex commerce…much to the disappointment and frustration of many sex worker activists who have taken liberal/progressive support for their causes for granted.

Considering the weakness of the Left these days, this is not a positive development at all…in fact, just as the total feality of the American Left to the Obama Administration just as the latter seems to be more obsessed with turning the party further and further away from even nominal progressive initiatives has weakened and eviserated the former to the state of irrelevancy, the move of the broader international Left towards sexually conservative abolitionist positions and towards repressive legislation that mostly empowers the
most reactionary elements of culture will simply serve to backfire on the Left as a whole.

If there was ever a time to return to the basic principles of equality, social solidarity, and militant defense of Left principles such as social justice, free and open expression, and self-autonomy and resources for free people to make informed decisions, then now is the time. Distractions like shaming men and women whose sex lives don’t meet certain narrow standards are not only wasteful, but dangerous.

Of course, I speak only for myself as as “sex-positive” Leftist…feel free to have your own opinion, and to accept or reject my views on your own.

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Is now available as part of my GlobalComment column.

Anna actively opposes sex-work, but she does so in context of the overall situation in Ukraine which is, I have to admit, quite brutal. We had a fascinating conversation, and, I think, we both walked away a little wiser for it. Plus, we talked about short skirts and feminism – one of my favourite subjects.

I hope you enjoy. :)

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In the US, Barack Obama’s first-day-of-school speech has pushed all kinds of buttons. On the extreme right, he was attacked with mindless zeal, while his centrist supporters were somewhat defensive.

And this was before he gave the speech.

Like many sex workers, I was a babysitter before I entered the sex trade. Childcare has shaped my perspective on power, status and the politics of virtue. My take on Obama’s shrewd advice is posted here.

If you’d like to follow me on Twitter, I’m TracyQuanNYC. Thanks for visiting and reading!

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SEX WORERS’ RIGHTS ARE HUMAN RIGHTS – the headline I read on a blog post by hard working Dublin councillor Bronwen Maher (pictured) last night – seemed at first to have a lot going for it.

I looked forward to an incisive piece about sex workers’ lack of rights and how they should be enabled if society is to progress on this thorny issue.

So I was not only disappointed and depressed, but actually astonished to discover beneath it the suggestion that the best way forward would be to adopt the Swedish regime of criminalising sex purchasers.

What sense lies behind this? Anyone who would advocate bolstering butchers, bakers and candlestick makers’ rights by locking up anyone who traded with them would surely be regarded as suffering learning difficulties. But, as usual on these rocks, sex has entered the door of the debate, so sense flies out of the window.

What’s more, Bronwen illustrates this posting with a photo of a sex workers’ rights demonstration in Perth, Australia – a country which has largely abandoned its Victorian UK laws in favour of a far more transparent regime, prioritising safety, health and risk minimisation among sex workers over keeping yet more prison wardens in work.

Where to start with Bronwen? Well, we could start by pointing out that laws have very little effect on people’s sexual choices in any event. Sodomy was illegal in the UK from 1885 until a decade or so ago, but gay men did not magically turn heterosexual for over a century – they simply went underground. Eventually a significant number either chose to come out, or were ‘outed’ among the establishment. Then suddenly, of course, the mood began to change.

Then we could point out that, far from reducing the (in context) much overstated human sex trafficking phenomenon, adopting the Swedish law would make it far more difficult to detect sex trafficking victims. As it so happens, while I have been writing this posting, another case has turned up today in Plymouth in which a client in an (alleged) brothel has apparently contacted the police over cases of girls allegedly trafficked into it.

This case joins a bulky file of evidence of ‘punters’ who, when suspecting a woman has been trafficked, have embarked on their rescue, as I itemised in evidence to the Commons Committee on the UK’s Policing and Crime Bill. How likely would they be to do this if the result could be a hefty fine, possible imprisonment and their names splashed all over the local paper?

So claims that the Swedes have somehow reduced their sex trafficking and/or sex work should not go unquestioned. A search of academic literature would reveal that the Swedes had only about 2,500 sex workers before they famously criminalised clients – a tiny number per head of population compared to the UK. There were probably as many sex workers in Copenhagen alone as there were in the whole of Sweden, and Stockholm’s red light area consisted of a single street.

Today the position is unclear but as a rule of thumb, “Stockholm + escort” in a Google search produces 468,000 results in 1.28 seconds and they aren’t all cars. Nor are they all presenting as Swedish.

A reading of Don Kulick’s 400,000 Swedish perverts provides an interesting historical background on how the Swedes came to adopt their law. Too lengthy to even summarise here, one might state that it had far more to do not with sex workers’ rights, but with Swedish concepts of sexual equality together with media xenophobia over perceived waves of foreign prostitutes supposedly about to invade Sweden carrying new and more deadly forms of HIV/Aids following Sweden’s European Union entry.

Reports suggest that migrant sex workers found in Sweden are routinely deported, and there are suggestions that some Swedish sex workers take advantage of this to reduce competition (as, perversely, their selling of sex has been simultaneously legalised along with the criminalisation of purchasing their services).

The above would suggest that the Swedes adopt the radical feminist approach of regarding all migrant sex workers as trafficked, in which case their sex trafficking figures, like the UK’s, would not conform to the Palermo Protocol international standard and would be meaningless, as not all cases would have involved coercion, deceit etc that is the hallmark of an adult trafficking case in international law.

Anyone with further doubts could have a wander around this Swedish sex worker’s site and see what she thinks about their law.

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Published in 2001, this article provoked horror in some sectors of feminism. I started studying the sex industry 15 years ago and have developed my ideas over ten years of publishing academic and mainstream articles, as well as two books, the most recent Sex at the Margins: Migration, Labour Markets and the Rescue Industry. Although I wouldn’t write this article exactly the same way today, I stand by the basic question: How is it feminist, if the goal is improving society and achieving more equality amongst human beings, to focus on crime, law and punishment? I wonder about these cultural questions at Border Thinking on Migration, Trafficking and Commercial Sex.

Sex workers and Violence Against Women: Utopic Visions or Battle of the Sexes?

Laura Mª Agustín

Development, 44.3, 107-110 (2001)

Sexual exploitation and prostitution

In the movement to construct a discourse of ‘violence against women’, and thus to raise consciousness about kinds of mistreatment which before were invisible, the stage has been reached where defining crime and achieving punishment appears to be the goal. While it is progressive to raise consciousness about violence and exploitation in an attempt to deter the commitment of crimes, I hope to show that the present emphasis on discipline is very far from a utopic vision and that we should now begin to move toward other suggestions for solutions.

The following argument uses the example of prostitution or ‘sexual exploitation’ as an instance of ‘violence against women’, but the approach can apply to any attempt to deal with not only definitions of gender and sexual violence but with proposals to deal with them. When applied to adult prostitution, the term ‘sexual exploitation’ attempts to change language to make ‘voluntary’ prostitution impossible. For those who wish to ‘abolish’ prostitution, therefore, this change in terms represents progress, for now language itself will not be complicit with the violence involved. For those who may or may not want to ‘abolish’ prostitution but who in the present put the priority on improving the everyday lot of prostitutes, this language change totalizes a variety of situations involving different levels of personal will and makes it more difficult to propose practical solutions. When applied to the prostitution of children, the term ‘sexual exploitation’ represents a project to change perceptions about childhood. For those who believe that the current western model of childhood as a time of innocence should become the ‘right’ of all children in the world, this term is very important.

Criminalization of clients

Efforts to change sexist, racist and other discriminatory forms of language have long been a focus of projects of social justice in western societies, and the push to define ‘violence against women’ clearly forms part of this movement. Along with this, we see a strong move to have actions that fall within these new definitions proclaimed as crimes and their perpetrators punished. If prostitution is globally redefined as sexual exploitation (by ‘globally’ I mean that no distinctions are made according to whether prostitutes say they ‘chose’ sex work to any extent), therefore, all those who purchase sexual services, called usually ‘clients’, become ‘exploiters’.

Obviously, different terms function better or coincide more with different situations, but when social movements consciously work to change language they almost inevitably eliminate these differences. Since there are still plenty of places in the world where prostitutes are simplistically viewed as evil, contaminated, immoral and diseased, campaigns to change language so as to see the lack of choice and elements of exploitation in prostitutes’ situations are positive efforts to help them. Why, then, do these positive efforts have to be based on finding a different villain, to replace the old one?

I am referring to the discipline-and-punishment model that these efforts to change language and change perception inevitably use: in constructing a victim they also construct a victimizer—the ‘exploiter’, the bad person. After that, it is inevitable that punishment becomes the focus of efforts: passing laws against the offense and deciding what price the offender should pay. This model of ‘law and order’ is familiar to most of us as an oppressive, dysfunctional criminal justice system. We know that prisons rarely rehabilitate offenders against the law; we know that in some countries prison conditions are so bad that riots occur frequently, and if they don’t, perhaps they should. We also know that it is usually extremely difficult to prove sexual offenses (because of how the law is constructed, because of the difficulty of all these definitions of victimization, because legal advice can find ways out, etc.). Yet we continue to insist on better policing and more effective punishment, as though we didn’t know all of this.

International regulations on trafficking and sexual exploitation

My own work examines both the discourses and the practical programming surrounding the European phenomenon of migrant prostitution, the term used to describe non-Europeans working in the European sex industry (and, indeed, everyone who travels from one place to another in that vast network of diverse businesses). In most countries of the European Union, migrants appear now to constitute more than half of working prostitutes, and in some countries possibly up to 90 percent (Tampep, 1999). This situation has caused a change in the thinking on violence: now ‘traffickers’ of sex workers are discussed more than their clients. Because so many of the migrants come from ‘third world’ countries, ‘trafficking’ discourses have become a forum for addressing ‘development’ projects such as structural adjustment policies of the International Monetary Fund. But the more active debates have concerned violence, in a way that constructs them as organized crime.

One of the fora of this highly conflictive discussion was the United Nations Commission for the Prevention of Crime and Penal Justice, which met various times in Vienna to elaborate protocols on the trafficking of migrant workers. Two distinct lobbying groups argued over definitions of words such as consent, obligation, force, coercion, deceit, abuse of power and exploitation. Two distinct protocols were produced, one which applies to the ‘trafficking of women and children’ while the other to ‘smuggling of migrants’. The gender distinction is clear, expressing a greater disposition of women –along with children– to be deceived (above all about sex work), and also expressing an apparently lesser disposition to migrate. Men, on the other hand, are seen as capable of migrating but of sometimes being handled like contraband, thus the word agreed on is not trafficking but smuggling. The resulting protocols now form part of the UN Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime (UN, 2000), which member countries will debate individually and decide to sign or not.

What is the problem? In an effort to save as many victims as possible, the protocols totalize the experience of all women migrants working in the sex industry, and all those who help them migrate—a wide array of family, friends, lovers, agents and entrepreneurs, as well as small-time delinquents and (probably, but this is not proved) big-time criminal networks—are defined as traffickers. Every kind of help, from preparing false working papers, visas or passports to meeting migrants at the airport and finding them a place to stay, is defined as the crime of trafficking.

The Coalition Against Trafficking in Women (CATW) specifically tries, both at the Vienna meetings and internationally, to fuse the two concepts of ‘trafficking’ and ‘prostitution’ and to define them both as crimes of violence against women. Not only everyone who helps people migrate and work in the sex industry but everyone who buys sexual services ends up defined as an exploiter, a rapist and a criminal. CATW favours legislation to penalize clients of prostitutes (CATW, 2000).

The booming sex market

The problem with proposing the penalization of sexual ‘exploiters’, or clients of prostitutes, comes from the magnitude of the phenomenon, which is almost never confronted. Statistics are unreliable for all sectors of an industry overwhelmingly unrecognized legally or in government accounting, and which operates informally and relies on bribes, legal loopholes and facades. However, we can understand from the many studies of different aspects of the sex industry that it is booming. Prostitution and exploitation sites are so numerous everywhere that customers cannot be exceptional cases (yet they are often spoken of as if they were ‘perverts’ or ‘deviants’). Rather it is clear that adult and adolescent men everywhere consider it permissible to buy sexual services, and some estimates calculate that most men do it at some time in their lives.

More than 20 years ago, one Roman prostitute calculated this way:

Rome was known to have 5,000 prostitutes. Let’s say that each one took home at least 50,000 liras a day. Men don’t go more than once a day. That means that for someone who asked 3,000 liras in a car, to arrive at 50,000 she had to do a lot, maybe twenty or so. Figure it out, 20 times 5,000 comes to 100,000 clients. Since it’s rare for them to go every day, maybe they go once or twice a week, the total comes to between 400,000 and 600,000 men going to whores every week. How many men live in Rome? A million and a half. Take away the old men, the children, the homosexuals and the impotent. I mean, definitely, more or less all men go. (Cutrufelli, 1988: 26, author’s translation)

A French report calculated in 1977 that an average of 40,000 men a day have sexual relations with prostitutes (Crimi, 1979). In 1996, a Spanish NGO estimated that 300,000 prostitutes might have three clients a day, making a million buying sexual services every day in Spain (Hernández Velasco, 1996). Other measures may demonstrate the size of the clientele: counts of the number of overt sex businesses, figures on users registered at Internet commercial sex sites, condom sales in sex establishments, turnover of vehicles at a given business site, etc.

The fact that practically none of these consumers acknowledge what they are buying should not distract us. Millions of men lie every day about this aspect of their lives, to someone: wives, friends, girlfriends, children, and themselves. This is a powerful amount of bad faith or bad karma, but do we want to put all these people in jail?

Changing attitudes to sex and power

Far from a utopic vision of freedom and equality for all people, what is being constructed here would have vast numbers of otherwise conventional people locked up or otherwise punished. Perhaps if the history of the penal justice system were more positive, we could say it would be worth it to get the cleaner, better society awaiting us afterward. But there is no such history in general; societies seem to be resigned to recidivist crime and unrehabilitated criminals. So why do we go on pretending prison works?

A focus on defining crimes and letting people know they are at risk of arrest for committing them furthermore relies on a theory of ‘deterrence’; that is, that potential criminals will not commit crimes if they know they may be punished for them. Conclusive evidence does not exist to show that this theory works, however, and perhaps least of all with sexual crimes. Many sexual activities are technically against the law, in both third and first world countries, but continue to be widely practiced, tolerated and accepted socially. There are States that forbid oral or anal sex or sadomasochism or homosexuality, but motivated people continue to engage in these practices. This is not to say that sexual exploitation or violence are the same as such practices but to demonstrate that penalizing sexual activities has a long history of failure. Above all, social efforts to abolish prostitution and penalize clients (in Europe and North America, where it might be thought possible) have failed for 200 years. Those involved simply move to less visible locations.

So where are the proposals that show a real utopian vision, of societies and cultures where exploitation is not routine? There do not seem to be many, as most projects make no attempt to work with victimizers/clients themselves as subjects. The proponents of this particular social change are largely women, and on this subject they distance themselves from men, making them potential criminals impossible to study, reason with or include in building a better world. This simplification also obscures the role of the many women who participate in exploitation/prostitution as procurers, business owners, managers and clients, as well as disappearing the fate of many male victims who deserve to be seen as needing support or help.

My suggestion is that we begin to move on to proposals that would work directly with people at all levels to change attitudes to sex and power. The changes would involve how we conceive of our personal desires and our potential power over others—absolutely fundamental changes. Thinking this way moves us away from classic prostitution debates and battles (a welcome relief) but also proposes to include ‘the other half’ of the problem in projects for change. Many of those working on the ground with victims of sexual exploitation cannot conceive of working with victimizers, whether they are sex business owners, taxi drivers or clients. But it should be remembered that not so long ago prostitutes were thought to be morally lax and contaminated, recalcitrant and generally unredeemable. That attitude has been changing, so we might contemplate possible change with those who exploit and commit violent acts, too.

If language is important to social movements, then the language being heard widely on the subject of sexual exploitation and prostitution needs reshaping. At the moment what is heard is disciplinary, which may make sense in the short run, but what we need are long-run, hopeful visions that do not continue to divide the world into two gendered camps in the traditional battle of the sexes.

References

CATW (2000) Coalition Against Trafficking in Women.

Crimi, B. (1979) ‘La prostituzione in Francia’. Paper presented at a Conference on Biological, Social and Legal Aspects of Prostitution, Rome, November.

Cutrufelli, M.R (1988) ‘La demanda de prostitución’, Debats, no. 24, June.

Hernández Velasco, I. (1996) ‘Un millón de hombres al día va de prostitutas’, El Mundo [Sociedad 26], 27th December.

Tampep (1999) Health, Migration and SexWork: The Experience of Tampep. Amsterdam: Mr. A. de Graaf Stichting.

UN (2000) Convención de las Naciones Unidas contra la Delincuencia Organizada Transnacional. Anexo II: Protocolo para prevenir, reprimir y sancionar la trata de personas, especialmente mujeres y niños. Anexo III: Protocolo contra el tráfico ilícito de migrantes por tierra, mar y aire. Vienna: UN Commission for Prevention of Crime and Penal Justice.

Laura Agustín, Border Thinking

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SEX TRAFFICKING victims can be left waiting days in UK brothels while police “make observations” before stepping in to rescue them.

The women, commonly referred to by Home Office ministers as being expected to service as many as 30 or 40 clients a day, could be left waiting “a number of days” while police keep the brothel “under observation,” Home Office minister Lord Brett (right) told the House of Lords during debates on the Policing and Crime Bill, which includes a controversial measure to criminalise clients of sex workers deemed coerced or trafficked.

Their ordeal would continue until “at some point, sufficient evidence will have been gathered,” he said.
Said Lord Brett:

If a brothel is under observation and it is suspected that prostitutes are being trafficked, primarily because they are being moved between different cities, which is quite a common occurrence, the place will be kept under observation for a number of days.

People will be seen going in and coming out, prostitutes will be seen going in and coming out and the movements of the people running the brothel will be seen. At some point, sufficient evidence will have been gathered to make arrests. They will be made in the light of those observations.

Meanwhile the ‘victim support’ page of the police ‘Blue Blindfold’ anti-trafficking site has been ‘coming soon’ now for over two years.

Two nationwide hunts for sex trafficking victims involving all 55 UK police forces discovered only 255 persons trafficked, well under the 4,000-strong Government estimate and less than a third of 1 percent of the UK‘s estimated 80,000-strong population of sex workers.

Giving examples was “always dangerous,” said Lord Brett.

Crossposted from An Anthology of English Pros

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