X:talk - Human rights, sex work & trafficking
dissidentisland [at] riseup [dot] net (dissident chickpea) | 18.11.2010 16:22 | London
Listen to the recording of the launch of the x:talk report on Human Rights, sex work and the challenge of trafficking.
On Wednesday 17 November 2010 the x:talk project launched it's report entitled 'Human Rights, sex work and the challenge of trafficking: A human rights impact assessment of anti-trafficking laws in the UK' [PDF] at the Centre for Possible Studies with a panel discussion on anti-trafficking policies.
This report was produced by the x:talk project and is the first study of anti-trafficking policies that reflects the experiences and views of people working in the sex industry in London. The report examines the anti-trafficking agenda in the UK and finds that it has been manipulated by abolitionists who have used anti-trafficking law and policies as a justification for increasing the surveillance and criminalisation of the legal indoor sex industry on an unprecedented scale. The existing focus in anti-trafficking policy on irregular migration, law enforcement and on the sex industry does not address the needs, choices and agency of trafficked people, whether they work in the sex industry or elsewhere, and prevents migrants and non-migrant people working in the sex industry from asserting fundamental rights.
The audio file below is a recording of the panel discussion and audience comments that followed.
dissidentisland [at] riseup [dot] net (dissident chickpea)
Original article on IMC London:
http://london.indymedia.org/articles/6054