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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday August 09 2017, @03:03PM   Printer-friendly
from the touchy-subject dept.

Submitted via IRC for Bytram

Around the world, there's a growing movement to decriminalize sex work. Last year, Amnesty International, the largest human rights group in the world, came out with a recommendation that governments should decriminalize consensual sex work and develop laws that ensure workers are "protected from harm, exploitation and coercion." A United Nations commission has also come out in support of legalizing prostitution.

But the idea is a divisive one, stirring impassioned debates and concerns about the ways varying approaches could harm sex workers. Amnesty's recent policy drew strong support from public health advocates and intense backlash from those aiming to end prostitution completely.

Understanding the scope, harms and public health implications of policies addressing the world's oldest profession is really tricky. While prostitution - the buying and selling of sex - is a multibillion dollar industry, the sex trade is clandestine by nature. It's taboo. That makes it really hard to study, especially in the United States.

That's most often the case, except in this one part of the country, where the laws of prostitution were totally upended. It's a peculiar story that's largely left out of the current discussion. The place in question is not Nevada, where there's a small number of regulated brothels in certain rural counties.

It's a whole state - Rhode Island.

For several years, ending in 2009, indoor prostitution such as in massage parlors, strip clubs and through online escorts, was not a crime in this tiny New England State.

The whole thing happened somewhat unintentionally. But at the time, it fueled a heated public debate about sex, crime and health.

Years later, some are revisiting the lessons learned.

Source: http://www.newsworks.org/index.php/local/item/105393-prostitution-decriminalized-rhode-islands-experiment


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  • (Score: 2) by bob_super on Wednesday August 09 2017, @05:31PM

    by bob_super (1357) on Wednesday August 09 2017, @05:31PM (#551203)

    Yep, we agree.
    Also, having other prostitutes be legal means that they can help the cops find the illegal ones.

    There isn't an easy abuse-free system, but the ideal is to license and regulate the market such that prostitutes get the same protections as Jane-welder and Joe-hairdresser. As long as the profession carries a strong stigma and hides in corners, the workers have more problems exercising their rights, and are the victims of their potential employers and customers. The large cash sums implied attract even more unpleasant characters than that profession naturally does. Groups of independent providers keeping tabs on each other, while protected from third parties and monitored by independent support groups, is about the best we can hope.
    People wanting to remove demand or offer are just delusional.

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