Report Submitted to Global Commission on HIV/AIDS
by Kiesha McCurtis, Sharmus Outlaw, Cristine Sardina and Penelope Saunders,
August 7, 2011
The following information is submitted by
the Best Practices Policy Project (BPPP) and the Desiree Alliance. Both
organizations were founded in 2005 to be part of a re-emerging movement for sex
worker rights in the United States. Both groups prioritize sex worker
leadership in issues of concern to them and strive to ensure social justice
through anti-oppression/anti-racism work. The Desiree Alliance has worked since its
inception to speak to the concerns of the wide range of people— including
lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities—who engage in sexual
commerce (such as street sex work, escort work, informal sexual negotiations
for basic income). The Best Practices Policy Project is dedicated to building
excellence amongst organizations working with sex workers and related
communities of people also affected by anti-prostitution policies (such as
transgender people, youth, low income people of color and immigrants) so that
collectively we can build a society in which these communities can enjoy their
health and rights.
Recently the
Desiree Alliance and Best Practices Policy Project produced a national report
on human rights abuses experienced by sex workers and people in the sex trade
that was submitted to the Human Rights Council at the United Nations for
consideration during the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) of the human rights
record of United States.[i]
This report and related advocacy led to UN Recommendation 86 that the U.S. “…ensure
access to public services paying attention to the special vulnerability of sex
workers to violence and human rights abuses” and subsequently the first ever
acknowledgement of the rights of sex workers by the US government in March 2011.
The information provided in this statement is drawn from materials developed
during the UPR process, other reports on HIV/AIDS produced by BPPP,[ii]
and our experiences as sex workers and allies working for social justice for
communities of sex workers in the U.S.
Overview of the laws and policies
affecting sex workers and related communities:
Criminal prohibition of sex for money and surrounding activities exists in
almost all states of the United States (with the exception of some counties in
the state of Nevada). Some forms of sex work, such as exotic dancing, may not
be prohibited by state legislation but they are always regulated by state and
municipal policies. Sex work that occurs in public spaces is also often policed
under legislation prohibiting loitering, public nuisance, trespassing or
“failure to obey” a police officer’s directive to move along. Some states in
the U.S. mandate minimum sentences so that judges are required to incarcerate
people convicted for prostitution-related offenses. Some states have sentencing
guidelines and judicial practices making a third charge for
prostitution-related offenses a felony. People arrested for
solicitation or other prostitution charges in many jurisdictions in the United
States are mandated to test for HIV and people testing positive can face
significant penalties and incarceration because of their HIV status.
Different forms of U.S. anti-trafficking
legislation and policies affect sex workers in the United States and globally.
Federal U.S. anti-trafficking policies undermine the health and rights of
sex workers both domestically and internationally by requiring that
organizations seeking funding adopt a policy against sex work
(“Anti-Prostitution Loyalty Oath”). This requirement is applied to international
and almost all U.S.-based organizations seeking funds from the President's
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). Organizations within the U.S. have
also been subject to the pledge under the Trafficking Victims Protection
Reauthorization Act. These restrictions mean that many organizations are
confused about what kinds of services they can provide to sex workers and have,
in some situations, lead to excellent harm reduction services being shuttered.
New forms of state level legislation to end “domestic trafficking” focusing on
“ending demand” for prostitution have been proposed and/or adopted in many U.S.
States intensifying policing of sex workers and their clients.[iii]
Specific issues of concern regarding
HIV, laws, policy and sex work:
The following issues affect sex workers,
people in the sex trade and people who are often profiled as prostitutes by the
police even if they are not engaged in sex work (such as transgender people,
immigrants, low-income people of color, youth of color).
• The
policing of anti-prostitution laws, related policies and by-laws across the
United States directly undermines the ability of sex workers to protect
themselves from HIV infection and, in a broader sense, alienates these
communities from the support needed to defend their health and rights. Sex
workers, and people the police assume to be sex workers, are harassed,
assaulted, sexually assaulted, extorted, and falsely arrested by police. The
law enforcement practice of using condoms as evidence and/or destroying condoms
and safe sex materials directly contravenes efforts to halt the spread of HIV
in the United States. People of color, transgender people, immigrants, homeless
people and youth of color are disproportionately affected by these law
enforcement activities.
• Mandatory
HIV testing of people arrested on prostitution and prostitution related
offenses violates the human rights of many and the imposition of higher
penalties (including felonies) on people who are said to be engaging sex work
while living with HIV punishes already vulnerable communities. In some states,
people testing positive face significant penalties and incarceration for their
engagement in sex work while positive, even if they used condoms and engaged in
less risky forms of sex with their partners. Information about their HIV status
(sometimes accompanied by photographs of them) is often distributed widely in
the media and local communities placing them at great risk of retaliation and
other abuse. Sharmus Outlaw, co-coordinator of the Desiree Alliance and
advocate for both sex workers and transgender people, commented during our
development of this statement that these kinds of laws reinforce deeply held
prejudices. “Many in society already incorrectly fear that sex workers spread
disease,” she noted, “Using these laws to arrest people living with HIV whips
up fear against sex workers, transgender people and men who have sex with men.”
• anti-prostitution
laws and policies are used as a tool to arrest migrants and deport them.
Migrant sex workers are therefore more likely than other groups of sex workers
to avoid public services and are therefore much less able to access safe sex
supplies, health services, and medications. Immigration policies prohibiting
people who have engaged in sex work and drug use from entering the U.S. also
mean that the International AIDS Conference (IAC) to be held in Washington,
D.C. in 2012 will not have a full complement of civil society participants.
This greatly reduced participation of key HIV advocates will impact information
sharing and planning of the global response to HIV/AIDS.
• Sex workers are
not a priority in the National HIV/AIDS Strategy (released in July 2010). In
fact the National HIV/AIDS Strategy makes no mention of sex workers at all. The
document emphasizes targeting resources to “vulnerable populations,” but this
emphasis refers to gay and bisexual men, African-Americans and Latinos. The
plan acknowledges issues confronted by drug users and mentions (but does not
explicitly prioritize) the importance of access to safe injecting equipment;
prioritizes the prevention needs of gay and bisexual men and transgender
people; and highlights the importance of racial and other disparities in the
United States as important drivers of the epidemic. In terms of reducing stigma
and discrimination, the plan recommends that policy makers “ensure that laws
and policies support our current understanding of best public health practices
for preventing and treating HIV.” However, the plan makes no mention of the
barriers faced by sex workers and people in the sex trade, nor are these groups
listed in prevention and treatment priorities.
• Globally
US policies, such as the “Anti-Prostitution Loyalty Oath” and the failed “war
on drugs,” undermine services and support for sex workers. Similar policies
within the United States do the same.
[i] Report
on The United States of America, 9th
Round of the Universal Periodic Review –
November 2010, http://www.bestpracticespolicy.org/UPRreport20101.html
[ii] human
rights challenges and responses in the context of HIV and AIDS, Submitted
September 15, 2010 to Civil Society Section, Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights, http://www.bestpracticespolicy.org/UNHIVreport2010.html
[iii] See for example,
the Illinois Safe Children Act adopted August 20,
2010 and legislation passed this year in Colorado which increases penalties
against clients of sex workers.