Hero of the Month: Seema Fokla, International Symbol of Sex Worker Unity

March 1, 2020

This month, DSW honors Ms. Seema Fokla as our Sex Worker Hero of the Month. Ms. Fokla is the current president of the Durbar Mahila Smanwaya Committee (DMSC or the Durbar), which translates to “The Unstoppable Women’s Synthesis Committee.” The Durbar is a collective of 65,000 sex workers, which functions as a forum for female, male, and transgender sex workers in West Bengal, India. DMSC is managed exclusively by sex workers and their children to create solidarity and collective strength within the sex worker community and other marginalized groups.

Since its founding in 1995, DMSC has been a beacon of collective citizenship and shared empowerment within the international sex worker rights community. It was the Durbar that established March 3 as International Sex Workers Rights Day. In 2001, the collective organized a festival that brought together more than 25,000 sex workers from around the world in Kolkata. DMSC’s mission is to integrate sex worker rights into the broader human rights movements.

No one has fought harder for the collective’s values than Seema Fokla. Under her leadership, the organization has pioneered sex work as a labor issue, incorporated transgender/non-conforming and LGBTQ rights into its work, and championed the separation of sex work from the environment of discrimination that surrounds it. Ms. Fokla is a former sex worker, as are all of the members of DMSC’s executive board. She sees the organization’s primary mission as one of fundamental respect. “If our profession becomes legal, then we will be treated with dignity. People will stop harassing us. Our children won’t be looked down upon,” Ms. Fokla said to a BBC reporter in a 2015 interview.

India has one of the largest sex work markets in the world. Prostitution itself is not illegal in the country, but the act of soliciting a client is. With more than 3 million sex workers working across Indian cities, more and more are participating in protests to demand licenses to work. Much of this organized activism is credited to the work of the Durbar.

Leaders of DMSC appear with the Mayor of Kolkata, India. (Photo: DMSC, 2017)

Seema Fokla speaks to a BBC reporter on the Durbar’s work in Kolkata and beyond. (2015)

DMSC activists demonstrate on the streets of Kolkata. Their collective includes male, female, and TGNC sex workers, as well as the children of sex workers who also face stigmatization.

DSW Newsletter #12 (March 2020)

Sex Worker Rights Community Rallies Around COVID-19 Crisis

March 30, 2020 The COVID-19 virus is a global crisis. There is not a single community that hasn’t been impacted by this pandemic. Businesses are shutting down, people are being...
Read More
Sex Worker Rights Community Rallies Around COVID-19 Crisis

DSW Travels To Nairobi to Meet With the African Sex Workers Alliance

February 13, 2020 DSW’s Kaytlin Bailey sat down with the African Sex Workers Alliance (ASWA) at its headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya. ASWA is a Pan-African alliance of sex worker-led organizations....
Read More
DSW Travels To Nairobi to Meet With the African Sex Workers Alliance

Hero of the Month: Seema Fokla, International Symbol of Sex Worker Unity

March 1, 2020 This month, DSW honors Ms. Seema Fokla as our Sex Worker Hero of the Month. Ms. Fokla is the current president of the Durbar Mahila Smanwaya Committee...
Read More
Hero of the Month: Seema Fokla, International Symbol of Sex Worker Unity

Honoring Our Movement: International Sex Worker Rights Day

March 3, 2020 Sex workers and allied communities celebrated International Sex Worker Rights Day, a holiday that commemorates the tireless efforts of harm-reduction advocates around the world. The holiday began...
Read More
Honoring Our Movement: International Sex Worker Rights Day

DSW Rallies With Activists To Pass the #WalkingWhileTrans Repeal

March 3, 2020 On International Sex Worker Rights Day, the Walking While Trans Coalition gathered at the Million Dollar Staircase in the Albany Statehouse to speak out about trans rights...
Read More
DSW Rallies With Activists To Pass the #WalkingWhileTrans Repeal

Our Bodies, Our Labors, Our Streets: International Women’s Day in NYC

March 8, 2020 The International Women’s Strike, also known as Paro Internacional de Mujeres, is a global movement of coalitions in more than 50 countries, organizing around International Women’s Day...
Read More
Our Bodies, Our Labors, Our Streets: International Women’s Day in NYC
Sex Worker Rights Community Rallies Around COVID-19 Crisis Sex Worker Rights Community Rallies Around...
DSW Travels To Nairobi to Meet With the African Sex Workers Alliance DSW Travels To Nairobi to Meet...
Hero of the Month: Seema Fokla, International Symbol of Sex Worker Unity Hero of the Month: Seema Fokla,...
Honoring Our Movement: International Sex Worker Rights Day Honoring Our Movement: International Sex Worker...
DSW Rallies With Activists To Pass the #WalkingWhileTrans Repeal DSW Rallies With Activists To Pass...
Our Bodies, Our Labors, Our Streets: International Women’s Day in NYC Our Bodies, Our Labors, Our Streets:...

DSW Newsletter Archive

Super Tuesday Is International Sex Worker Rights Day

Decriminalize Sex Work
www.DecriminalizeSex.Work
Contact: Kaytlin Bailey, Communications Director
[email protected] (m) 919-649-7725

NEW YORK, NEW YORK
February 27, 2020

Super Tuesday Is International Sex Worker Rights Day

Super Tuesday, March 3, is also International Sex Worker Rights Day.

International Sex Worker Rights Day began in 2001, when over 25,000 sex workers gathered in India for a festival organised by Durbar Mahila Samanwaya Committee, a Calcutta-based sex worker rights group that represents more than 65,000 male, female, and transgender sex workers. Durbar is a Bengali word that means unstoppable.

Sex workers and their allies across the world celebrate March 3 as International Sex Worker Rights Day, an annual and international event. On Super Tuesday, sex workers and their allies will be among the primary voters in Alabama, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, and Virginia. The majority of voters across the political spectrum support sex worker rights; we deserve a candidate who does too.

Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) has updated its presidential candidate report card ahead of this historic day. Kaytlin Bailey, director of communications for DSW, explains, “Sex workers vote.”

To see the report card for the entire field of Democratic presidential candidates, please visit https://decriminalizesex.work/2020-presidential-campaign.

–end–

DSW Travels To Nairobi to Meet With the African Sex Workers Alliance

February 13, 2020

DSW’s Kaytlin Bailey sat down with the African Sex Workers Alliance (ASWA) at its headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya. ASWA is a Pan-African alliance of sex worker-led organizations. The group was formed in 2009 and has grown to include members from 33 countries. Bailey and ASWA discussed the overlap between what sex workers around the world are seeking in their collective fight for recognition and safety.

The discussion with ASWA centered around the power of personal storytelling within the sex worker rights movement and beyond. The conversation also explored how various legal models in different African countries impact sex workers and the LGBTQ communities there.

Later that evening, Kaytlin Bailey performed her new one-woman show, “Whore’s Eye View,” to a sold-out audience at the BaoBox in Nairobi. After the show, Rose Wanjiku told the audience about ASWA’s work, handed out literature, and educated people about efforts to decriminalize sex work in Kenya.

Decriminalization campaigns are gaining momentum across the continent, bolstered by ASWA’s support and international collaborations. Proceeds from the performance benefited the organization. To learn more about the work of ASWA, particularly the Sex Worker Academy Africa, their groundbreaking community empowerment program, visit their website here.

DSW’s Kaytlin Bailey performs “Whore’s Eye View” for a sold-out audience in Nairobi. Proceeds benefited ASWA.

DSW’s Kaytlin Bailey (center) poses with Rose Wanjiku (right) and a fellow ASWA activist (left).

DSW Newsletter #12 (March 2020)

Sex Worker Rights Community Rallies Around COVID-19 Crisis

March 30, 2020 The COVID-19 virus is a global crisis. There is not a single community that hasn’t been impacted by this pandemic. Businesses are shutting down, people are being...
Read More
Sex Worker Rights Community Rallies Around COVID-19 Crisis

DSW Travels To Nairobi to Meet With the African Sex Workers Alliance

February 13, 2020 DSW’s Kaytlin Bailey sat down with the African Sex Workers Alliance (ASWA) at its headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya. ASWA is a Pan-African alliance of sex worker-led organizations....
Read More
DSW Travels To Nairobi to Meet With the African Sex Workers Alliance

Hero of the Month: Seema Fokla, International Symbol of Sex Worker Unity

March 1, 2020 This month, DSW honors Ms. Seema Fokla as our Sex Worker Hero of the Month. Ms. Fokla is the current president of the Durbar Mahila Smanwaya Committee...
Read More
Hero of the Month: Seema Fokla, International Symbol of Sex Worker Unity

Honoring Our Movement: International Sex Worker Rights Day

March 3, 2020 Sex workers and allied communities celebrated International Sex Worker Rights Day, a holiday that commemorates the tireless efforts of harm-reduction advocates around the world. The holiday began...
Read More
Honoring Our Movement: International Sex Worker Rights Day

DSW Rallies With Activists To Pass the #WalkingWhileTrans Repeal

March 3, 2020 On International Sex Worker Rights Day, the Walking While Trans Coalition gathered at the Million Dollar Staircase in the Albany Statehouse to speak out about trans rights...
Read More
DSW Rallies With Activists To Pass the #WalkingWhileTrans Repeal

Our Bodies, Our Labors, Our Streets: International Women’s Day in NYC

March 8, 2020 The International Women’s Strike, also known as Paro Internacional de Mujeres, is a global movement of coalitions in more than 50 countries, organizing around International Women’s Day...
Read More
Our Bodies, Our Labors, Our Streets: International Women’s Day in NYC
Sex Worker Rights Community Rallies Around COVID-19 Crisis Sex Worker Rights Community Rallies Around...
DSW Travels To Nairobi to Meet With the African Sex Workers Alliance DSW Travels To Nairobi to Meet...
Hero of the Month: Seema Fokla, International Symbol of Sex Worker Unity Hero of the Month: Seema Fokla,...
Honoring Our Movement: International Sex Worker Rights Day Honoring Our Movement: International Sex Worker...
DSW Rallies With Activists To Pass the #WalkingWhileTrans Repeal DSW Rallies With Activists To Pass...
Our Bodies, Our Labors, Our Streets: International Women’s Day in NYC Our Bodies, Our Labors, Our Streets:...

DSW Newsletter Archive

Sex Worker Advocates Grade Democratic Candidates on Prostitution Policy Positions

Decriminalize Sex Work
www.DecriminalizeSex.Work
Contact J. Leigh Brantly, Research & Project Manager
[email protected]

NEW YORK, NEW YORK
February 6, 2020

Sex Worker Advocates Grade Democratic Candidates on Prostitution Policy Positions

Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW), the largest organization in the country focused solely on decriminalizing sex work, released its presidential candidate “report card” on Thursday, February 6, 2020. The organization is encouraging primary voters to use the issue as a litmus test for candidates who claim they want to reduce prison populations, support human rights, and promote health and safety within our communities.

Kaytlin Bailey, director of communications for DSW, explains, “Every candidate claims to want to reduce violence and exploitation in the sex industry. We graded the candidates based on whether or not the policies they support will help us achieve those goals. Voters should know how candidates think about policing the oldest profession.”

All three frontrunners, Bernie Sanders, Pete Buttigieg, and Elizabeth Warren, scored a “C” from the sex worker rights group. Michael Bloomberg received the only outright “F” because of his degrading public remarks and punitive policies. Data from the New York Division of Justice Services (DCJS) showed that arrest rates for prostitution were 30% higher during Bloomberg’s tenure as mayor. Demographic data reveals that the spike in arrest rates almost exclusively targeted black Americans.

Melissa Broudo, general council for DSW, spoke to campaigns while preparing this report. “We were thrilled that many candidates were open to this conversation. In my nearly 20 years advocating for decriminalization, this is the first time this issue is part of the national conversation.”

Data for Progress released a poll on January 30, 2020, showing that an “outright majority of all voters support decriminalizing sex work.”

To see the report card for the entire field of Democratic presidential candidates, please visit https://decriminalizesex.work/advocacy/2020-presidential-campaign.

–end–

DSW Ranks Presidential Candidates

February 6, 2020

In light of the recent poll by Data for Progress, revealing that a majority of US voters support the decriminalization of consensual, adult prostitution, it is clear that sex work policy reform has become a national issue. Many Democratic primary candidates have expressed “openness to the decriminalization of sex work.” Others position themselves under what they describe as decriminalization but, in effect, ranges from prohibition-style criminalization to government regulation. Others have failed to voice an opinion on this critical issue.

DSW has released its report card grading each candidate on whether and how they intend to protect the safety and health of sex workers. We assigned grades to each candidate based on their stated policy positions, voting records, public statements, and private conversations.

Reason magazine featured DSW’s rankings in an article by Elizabeth Nolan Brown. To see how the democratic primary candidates stack up on these issues, visit DSW’s page here.

DSW Newsletter #11 (February 2020)

DSW Ranks Presidential Candidates

February 6, 2020 In light of the recent poll by Data for Progress, revealing that a majority of US voters support the decriminalization of consensual, adult prostitution, it is clear...
Read More
DSW Ranks Presidential Candidates

Adult Entertainment Industry Supports DSW in the Fight Against Stigma

January 22-25, 2020 DSW attended the Adult Video News (AVN) Awards Conference in Las Vegas. At this annual expo, meet-and-greet, and awards show, members of the adult entertainment industry exhibit...
Read More
Adult Entertainment Industry Supports DSW in the Fight Against Stigma

WFF Wins Appeal in Federal Court

January 24, 2020 The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit ruled that plaintiffs in the Woodhull Freedom Foundation’s (WFF’s) lawsuit against the United States have standing to pursue...
Read More
WFF Wins Appeal in Federal Court

Majority of Voters Support Decrim

January 30, 2020 A national poll released by Data for Progress (DFP) found that an outright majority of voters support the full decriminalization of adult consensual sex work. Two-thirds of...
Read More
Majority of Voters Support Decrim

February Hero

Marsha P. Johnson Honored by Governor Cuomo as He Endorses “Walking­ While­ Trans” Repeal February 1, 2020 Marsha P. Johnson is the first to be honored by DSW’s monthly hero...
Read More
February Hero
DSW Ranks Presidential Candidates DSW Ranks Presidential Candidates
Adult Entertainment Industry Supports DSW in the Fight Against Stigma Adult Entertainment Industry Supports DSW in...
WFF Wins Appeal in Federal Court WFF Wins Appeal in Federal Court
Majority of Voters Support Decrim Majority of Voters Support Decrim
February Hero February Hero

DSW Newsletter Archive

February Hero

Marsha P. Johnson Honored by Governor Cuomo as He Endorses “Walking­ While­ Trans” Repeal

February 1, 2020

Marsha P. Johnson is the first to be honored by DSW’s monthly hero campaign. Ms. Johnson, who passed away on July 6, 1992, was a queer liberation activist and one of the most prominent figures in the Stonewall Uprising of 1969. She worked as a prostitute for much of her life and is a fixture of the intersection between transgender, gender non-confirming, non-binary, and LGBTQI liberation and sex worker rights. Marsha’s legacy is critical to movements fighting for New York’s most vulnerable communities. Throughout her life, she spoke out against oppressive policing; advocated for sex workers, prisoners, and people with HIV/AIDS; and founded one of the first safe spaces for transgender and homeless youth.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D-NY) announced that he would rename East River State Park after Marsha P. Johnson during his speech at the Human Rights Campaign’s Greater New York gala. In the same address, Governor Cuomo formally endorsed legislation to repeal a loitering statute known as the “Walking While Trans Ban.” Walking While Trans has historically enabled law enforcement to arrest transgender women, particularly those of color, for merely walking down the street or wearing provocative clothing. This harmful and discriminatory law is responsible for a significant number of prostitution-related arrests in New York City.

The governor’s endorsement is an essential step towards repealing Section 240.37 of New York State’s penal law, an initiative sponsored by Senator Brad Hoylman (D-Manhattan) and Assemblymember Amy Paulin (D-Westchester). The repeal failed to pass last session after being stalled in the Senate Codes Committee. The #WalkingWhileTransBan coalition applauded the governor in a written statement. They said, “We look forward to working together with the Governor to ensure Black and LatinX women and TGNC [transgender and gender-nonconforming] communities are no longer arbitrarily targeted for gender-based stop-and-frisk policing.”

New York City is taking important steps to address its history of erasure and criminalization of TGNC individuals of color. The NYC police department updated its patrol guide last year to ban the targeting of individuals based on “gender, gender identity, clothing, and location.” Last year, Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) announced that the city would be building a monument on Christopher Street dedicated to Johnson and fellow transgender activist Sylvia Rivera.

The re-dedication of East River Park and recognition of Johnson’s and Rivera’s work are sorely needed to educate communities about the true history of gay liberation in New York and beyond. Pride has historically been portrayed as an exclusively white, gay, and cisgendered male movement. Statues of LGBTQ individuals, particularly those of color, are markedly absent from the city’s monuments.

There is no better way to honor the legacy of this fearless visionary than to protect the rights of the communities she spent her life championing. If you are a New York State resident, in honor of Ms. Johnson’s life and legacy, and to help build a safer and more just community for all, please urge your representatives to repeal Walking While Trans. You can do so by contacting your two state legislators through DSW’s Take Action page.

Marsha P. Johnson protests Bellevue Hospital’s treatment of street people and gay people, circa 1968-75. (Photo: Diana Davies/NY Public Library)

From left to right: Sylvia Rivera, Marsha P. Johnson, Jane Vercaine, Barbara Deming, Kady Vandeurs, Carol Grosberg, and others lead a protest at City Hall (Photo: Diana Davies/Courtesy of the New York Public Library, Manuscripts and Archives Division)

Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) addresses the crowd at the Marriott Marquis during the February 1 Human Rights Campaign’s Greater New York gala. (Photo: Matt Tracy/Gay City News)

DSW Newsletter #11 (February 2020)

DSW Ranks Presidential Candidates

February 6, 2020 In light of the recent poll by Data for Progress, revealing that a majority of US voters support the decriminalization of consensual, adult prostitution, it is clear...
Read More
DSW Ranks Presidential Candidates

Adult Entertainment Industry Supports DSW in the Fight Against Stigma

January 22-25, 2020 DSW attended the Adult Video News (AVN) Awards Conference in Las Vegas. At this annual expo, meet-and-greet, and awards show, members of the adult entertainment industry exhibit...
Read More
Adult Entertainment Industry Supports DSW in the Fight Against Stigma

WFF Wins Appeal in Federal Court

January 24, 2020 The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit ruled that plaintiffs in the Woodhull Freedom Foundation’s (WFF’s) lawsuit against the United States have standing to pursue...
Read More
WFF Wins Appeal in Federal Court

Majority of Voters Support Decrim

January 30, 2020 A national poll released by Data for Progress (DFP) found that an outright majority of voters support the full decriminalization of adult consensual sex work. Two-thirds of...
Read More
Majority of Voters Support Decrim

February Hero

Marsha P. Johnson Honored by Governor Cuomo as He Endorses “Walking­ While­ Trans” Repeal February 1, 2020 Marsha P. Johnson is the first to be honored by DSW’s monthly hero...
Read More
February Hero
DSW Ranks Presidential Candidates DSW Ranks Presidential Candidates
Adult Entertainment Industry Supports DSW in the Fight Against Stigma Adult Entertainment Industry Supports DSW in...
WFF Wins Appeal in Federal Court WFF Wins Appeal in Federal Court
Majority of Voters Support Decrim Majority of Voters Support Decrim
February Hero February Hero

DSW Newsletter Archive