Mark Your Calendars

May 1, 2021

DSW is proud to be one of the sponsors of a tribute to legendary activist Margo St. James. We hope you will join us and many others from around the world to celebrate the incredible life and legacy of Margo St. James. The May 1 virtual event is free to attend though one must RSVP. Visit MargoStJames.com to RSVP and for more information.

The host committee states, “Margo St. James, who founded the prostitutes’ rights organization COYOTE (Call Off Your Old Tired Ethics), and later, the St. James Infirmary, left her body on January 11, 2021. We are a group of Margo’s friends, colleagues, and a collective of supporters who are producing a virtual international tribute event on May 1 at 11 am PST / 2 pm EST. The event will run from one to two hours.”

Mark Your Calendars

Courtesy of Old Pro Productions.

DSW Newsletter #25 (April 2021)

Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie

April 6, 2021 Gizelle Marie loves her job as a stripper. She loves it so much, in fact, that she has become a leading voice for progressive reforms within the...
Read More
Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie

Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

April 21, 2021 Manhattan district attorney Cyrus R. Vance, following in the footsteps of other New York City boroughs, announced that his office would no longer prosecute individuals for prostitution...
Read More
Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

Equality Model vs Nordic Model

April 20, 2021 Some are now calling the Nordic Model of Prostitution the Equality Model Attaching the term “Equality” to the legal framework more commonly known as the Nordic Model...
Read More
Equality Model vs Nordic Model

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

April 6: DSW’s Melissa Sontag Broudo and J. Leigh Oshiro-Brantly joined other advocates for a panel on decriminalizing sex work organized by Equality New York for their 2021 Advocacy Day. Some...
Read More
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

Mark Your Calendars

May 1, 2021 DSW is proud to be one of the sponsors of a tribute to legendary activist Margo St. James. We hope you will join us and many others...
Read More
Mark Your Calendars
Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie
Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan...
Equality Model vs Nordic Model Equality Model vs Nordic Model
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise DSW Staff Share Their Expertise
Mark Your Calendars Mark Your Calendars

DSW Newsletter Archive

Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

April 21, 2021

Manhattan district attorney Cyrus R. Vance, following in the footsteps of other New York City boroughs, announced that his office would no longer prosecute individuals for prostitution and unlicensed massage. The news was met with mixed emotions from sex workers and their allies because the policy leaves intact the criminalization of clients. Some welcomed the measure as an incremental step towards the full decriminalization of consensual adult sex work. Others worried that the move to decriminalize the sale of sex but not the purchase might be an endorsement of the Entrapment/‍Equality/‌End-Demand/‍Nordic Model.

DSW is fighting for the full decriminalization of consensual adult sex work. Unequivocal evidence shows that this is the only legal framework for sex work that increases public health and safety and decreases exploitation. The Entrapment Model offers none of the same benefits and continues to put sex workers at risk as their industry is still pushed underground.

Though DSW is working towards the full decriminalization of consensual adult sex work, we do welcome the incremental step that Vance and others have taken, which will offer some measure of relief to individuals criminalized under our current system. Transgender advocates in Manhattan celebrated the news as they are often targeted and profiled for simply being themselves. Several district attorneys around the country, including Marilyn Mosby in Baltimore, Eric Gonzalez in Brooklyn, and Eli Savit in Washtenaw County have recently announced that they will no longer prosecute prostitution and related charges, and some have taken steps to vacate hundreds of past convictions for prostitution. The clearing of arrest records for prostitution is an especially welcome step as a criminal record can significantly hinder one’s ability to work and access housing and other essential resources.

Implementation of the Entrapment Model in any jurisdiction would be devastating for sex workers and anyone else who cares to decrease exploitation in the sex trade and increase public health and safety for all. The Manhattan DA’s office’s announcement does not mean that Manhattan has adopted this legal framework. Though they will still prosecute clients, the laws have not been changed or codified to implement the Entrapment Model. Along with others, DSW will closely monitor the implementation of this new policy and its effects on the health and safety of sex workers.

DSW has put together resources that succinctly explain the differences between full decriminalization and the Entrapment Model and why FULL decriminalization is the only choice to increase health and safety and decrease exploitation.

Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

The SWOP NYC contingent marches in the 2011 NYC Pride Parade. (Courtesy of Melissa Sontag Broudo).

DSW Newsletter #25 (April 2021)

Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie

April 6, 2021 Gizelle Marie loves her job as a stripper. She loves it so much, in fact, that she has become a leading voice for progressive reforms within the...
Read More
Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie

Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

April 21, 2021 Manhattan district attorney Cyrus R. Vance, following in the footsteps of other New York City boroughs, announced that his office would no longer prosecute individuals for prostitution...
Read More
Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

Equality Model vs Nordic Model

April 20, 2021 Some are now calling the Nordic Model of Prostitution the Equality Model Attaching the term “Equality” to the legal framework more commonly known as the Nordic Model...
Read More
Equality Model vs Nordic Model

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

April 6: DSW’s Melissa Sontag Broudo and J. Leigh Oshiro-Brantly joined other advocates for a panel on decriminalizing sex work organized by Equality New York for their 2021 Advocacy Day. Some...
Read More
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

Mark Your Calendars

May 1, 2021 DSW is proud to be one of the sponsors of a tribute to legendary activist Margo St. James. We hope you will join us and many others...
Read More
Mark Your Calendars
Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie
Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan...
Equality Model vs Nordic Model Equality Model vs Nordic Model
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise DSW Staff Share Their Expertise
Mark Your Calendars Mark Your Calendars

DSW Newsletter Archive

Equality Model vs Nordic Model

April 20, 2021

Some are now calling the Nordic Model of Prostitution the Equality Model

Equality Model

Attaching the term “Equality” to the legal framework more commonly known as the Nordic Model of prostitution and also known as the End Demand/‍Entrapment Model may lead some to believe it is in the best interest of sex workers and communities. Unequivocal evidence shows that it is not.

At first glance, it may seem ironic to use “equality” to describe prostitution laws designed to criminalize one side of a sex work transaction. But given the clear correlation between implementing laws that criminalize clients and increasing violence perpetrated against sex workers, perhaps the “equality” they’re referring to is how these laws equally harm everyone they touch.

In both implementation and outcomes, the Equality Model is anything but equal. Since police primarily use these laws to essentially entrap sex work clients, the Nordic Model rebranding we believe fits best is the “Entrapment Model.”

what is the nordic model

What is the Nordic Model?

To fight the rebranding efforts of Equality Model proponents, it’s important to be ready with a quick reply when someone asks, “What is the Nordic Model?” Prostitution laws have an immediate and powerful impact on the lives of real people in our communities. To advocate for the human rights and safety of sex workers across the country, it is critical to understand the distinctions between different policies.

The Nordic Model of prostitution is based on the theory that the way to “free” sex workers from lives of prostitution is to criminalize clients and third parties. The theory assumes sex workers are victims, but in practice, the law tends to treat them more like criminals. Sex work exists on a spectrum of choice, circumstance, and coercion. Sex work is work and no one should assume that sex workers do not have choice or autonomy. This patriarchal view of sex work is a dangerous threat to the bodily autonomy and freedom of choice that women and other marginalized groups have been fighting to achieve for so long.

Laws based on the Nordic Model target sex work clients with entrapment, making them far more likely to pursue anonymous interactions in remote locations. Keeping sex work in the dark jeopardizes the harm reduction strategies sex workers use to keep themselves safe and leaves them vulnerable to predators and criminals.

Prostitution Laws

Prostitution Laws across the globe: Entrapment Model failures

From added violence to malicious evictions, prostitution laws like the Entrapment Model have shown themselves to be simultaneously ineffective at ending exploitation in the sex trade and harmful to the people they are meant to protect.

Northern Ireland created their Nordic Model-based prostitution laws in a naive attempt to end demand for sex work. Rather than decrease demand, they’ve experienced an increase in online ads since implementation in 2015. A study conducted by the Department of Justice also found an increase in harassment and anti-social behaviors directed at sex workers since the policy change.

Norway enacted prostitution laws based on the Nordic Model that intentionally evicted over 400 sex workers, mostly migrant women, from their homes. The project was aptly named “Operation Homeless” by Norwegian police.

Swedish prostitution laws enacted in 1999 use landlords as weapons against sex workers. These laws hold landlords liable for promoting prostitution if they don’t evict sex workers simply for having used their homes to provide sexual services.

Equality Model New York

Equality Model New York

The promoters of the newly rebranded Equality Model of prostitution have launched their U.S. campaign in New York. Despite failing to reduce demand for erotic services or deter people from engaging in sex work, the Equality Model New York project has decided to push forward with their entrapment-focused legislation.

This Nordic Model offshoot has been rejected again and again by sex workers and in popular media.

Sex Worker Jobs

Sex worker jobs are not inherently dangerous. Criminalization makes the work dangerous.

Criminalizing clients keeps the entire sex work industry underground and makes sex worker jobs more dependent on third parties who might mean them harm, leaving them more vulnerable to exploitation.

Sex workers in countries where prostitution laws like the Entrapment Model have been implemented are frequently threatened and harassed by law enforcement. Criminalizing clients results in police raids on sex workers which are  psychologically and physically harmful. These encounters also often result in sex workers experiencing isolation and stigma due to being outed to their community.

Decriminalize Sex Work

Take action! Help defeat this new Entrapment Model legislation.

Please send this letter to your State Representative and help reject the Entrapment Model before it gets a foothold in the United States. With your support, we can fully decriminalize consensual adult sex work across the country and improve the health and safety of our communities.

DSW Newsletter #25 (April 2021)

Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie

April 6, 2021 Gizelle Marie loves her job as a stripper. She loves it so much, in fact, that she has become a leading voice for progressive reforms within the...
Read More
Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie

Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

April 21, 2021 Manhattan district attorney Cyrus R. Vance, following in the footsteps of other New York City boroughs, announced that his office would no longer prosecute individuals for prostitution...
Read More
Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

Equality Model vs Nordic Model

April 20, 2021 Some are now calling the Nordic Model of Prostitution the Equality Model Attaching the term “Equality” to the legal framework more commonly known as the Nordic Model...
Read More
Equality Model vs Nordic Model

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

April 6: DSW’s Melissa Sontag Broudo and J. Leigh Oshiro-Brantly joined other advocates for a panel on decriminalizing sex work organized by Equality New York for their 2021 Advocacy Day. Some...
Read More
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

Mark Your Calendars

May 1, 2021 DSW is proud to be one of the sponsors of a tribute to legendary activist Margo St. James. We hope you will join us and many others...
Read More
Mark Your Calendars
Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie
Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan...
Equality Model vs Nordic Model Equality Model vs Nordic Model
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise DSW Staff Share Their Expertise
Mark Your Calendars Mark Your Calendars

DSW Newsletter Archive

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

April 6: DSW’s Melissa Sontag Broudo and J. Leigh Oshiro-Brantly joined other advocates for a panel on decriminalizing sex work organized by Equality New York for their 2021 Advocacy Day. Some panelists shared deeply personal experiences about how the criminalization of sex work hinders their ability to live safely and freely.

April 7: Melissa Sontag Broudo discussed public health and safety benefits of decriminalizing sex work for her alma mater, John Hopkins University’s “Spotlight Series.”

Watch the recording here.

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

The Equality New York Decriminalization Panel.

DSW Newsletter #25 (April 2021)

Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie

April 6, 2021 Gizelle Marie loves her job as a stripper. She loves it so much, in fact, that she has become a leading voice for progressive reforms within the...
Read More
Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie

Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

April 21, 2021 Manhattan district attorney Cyrus R. Vance, following in the footsteps of other New York City boroughs, announced that his office would no longer prosecute individuals for prostitution...
Read More
Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

Equality Model vs Nordic Model

April 20, 2021 Some are now calling the Nordic Model of Prostitution the Equality Model Attaching the term “Equality” to the legal framework more commonly known as the Nordic Model...
Read More
Equality Model vs Nordic Model

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

April 6: DSW’s Melissa Sontag Broudo and J. Leigh Oshiro-Brantly joined other advocates for a panel on decriminalizing sex work organized by Equality New York for their 2021 Advocacy Day. Some...
Read More
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

Mark Your Calendars

May 1, 2021 DSW is proud to be one of the sponsors of a tribute to legendary activist Margo St. James. We hope you will join us and many others...
Read More
Mark Your Calendars
Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie
Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan...
Equality Model vs Nordic Model Equality Model vs Nordic Model
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise DSW Staff Share Their Expertise
Mark Your Calendars Mark Your Calendars

DSW Newsletter Archive

Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie

April 6, 2021

Gizelle Marie loves her job as a stripper. She loves it so much, in fact, that she has become a leading voice for progressive reforms within the industry — for herself, for other dancers, and for the generations that will follow her. Racism, colorism, misogyny, and wage theft are all issues Gizelle Marie is fighting head-on. Sticking one’s neck out to challenge the status quo is risky in any industry, let alone one as stigmatized and marginalized as stripping, but Gizelle Marie is a risk-taker. Despite being banned from working at a number of clubs, likely due to her advocacy for the rights of individual dancers, Gizelle Marie is undeterred. She is aware of her relative privilege as a cis-gendered, lighter-skinned woman and is dedicated to using this privilege to ensure that all of her colleagues have access to safe and fair working conditions.

“Gizelle Marie always puts others before herself. She’ll go without something to be able to give it to someone else. I’ve seen her do it over and over again,” says DSW’s Melissa Sontag Broudo. Gizelle’s devotion to her colleagues and improving the way society views and treats sex workers is evidenced regularly through big actions and small gestures. When the COVID-19 pandemic hit and many sex workers lost their ability to earn an income, Gizelle Marie launched a mutual aid fund that raised nearly $60,000.00 to support them. She has taken club promoters who fail to pay dancers what they should to court, co-organized the largest demonstration for sex worker rights ever to take place in the U.S., and recently handed over her pair of brand new shoes to another dancer who didn’t have any.

Gizelle Marie credits her grandmother, who raised her, for instilling a deep respect for others and their struggles. She says, “my grandmother made so many sacrifices to be able to take care of me. I’m inspired by her. It’s because of her that I want to help people as much as I can.” It angers Gizelle Marie that because of the way most clubs are structured, dancers are pitted against each other, and it can feel like a competition to earn a living. She wants to change this. Gizelle Marie wants sex workers to feel that they’re “all one” so that they can support each other and find power in numbers.

Gizelle Marie’s ultimate goal is the decriminalization of all forms of consensual adult sex work. She explains that though her work as a stripper is legal, all sex workers face unnecessary risks until all forms of consensual adult sex work are decriminalized. Criminalization increases stigmatization, violence, and other factors that put her community in jeopardy.

Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie

Courtesy of Gizelle Marie.

DSW Newsletter #25 (April 2021)

Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie

April 6, 2021 Gizelle Marie loves her job as a stripper. She loves it so much, in fact, that she has become a leading voice for progressive reforms within the...
Read More
Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie

Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

April 21, 2021 Manhattan district attorney Cyrus R. Vance, following in the footsteps of other New York City boroughs, announced that his office would no longer prosecute individuals for prostitution...
Read More
Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

Equality Model vs Nordic Model

April 20, 2021 Some are now calling the Nordic Model of Prostitution the Equality Model Attaching the term “Equality” to the legal framework more commonly known as the Nordic Model...
Read More
Equality Model vs Nordic Model

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

April 6: DSW’s Melissa Sontag Broudo and J. Leigh Oshiro-Brantly joined other advocates for a panel on decriminalizing sex work organized by Equality New York for their 2021 Advocacy Day. Some...
Read More
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

Mark Your Calendars

May 1, 2021 DSW is proud to be one of the sponsors of a tribute to legendary activist Margo St. James. We hope you will join us and many others...
Read More
Mark Your Calendars
Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie
Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan...
Equality Model vs Nordic Model Equality Model vs Nordic Model
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise DSW Staff Share Their Expertise
Mark Your Calendars Mark Your Calendars

DSW Newsletter Archive

Mark Your Calendars

April 6, 2021: Equality New York (EQNY), a statewide advocacy organization working to advance equality and justice for LGBTQI New Yorkers and their families, will hold its 2021 Advocacy Day on April 6. DSW’s Legal Director Melissa Broudo, is part of the team organizing the day; DSW’s J. Leigh Oshiro-Brantly and Ceyenne Doroshow, and Broudo herself, will all be featured on panels throughout the event.

For more information and to register, visit: https://www.equalityny.org/2021-nys-lgbtqi-virtual-advocacy-day/

SWOP Mayoral Forum

(tentative date) May 20, 2021: SWOP Brooklyn will host a New York City Mayoral Candidate Forum on sex work and police reform. Candidates will answer questions from the community and have the opportunity to outline their plans to hold law enforcement accountable, reform mass incarceration, and improve the health, safety, and human rights of sex workers, trafficking survivors, and our communities at large. The date is subject to change.

Courtesy of Equality New York.

DSW Newsletter #24 (March 2021)

Heroes of the Month: Scientists for Sex Worker Rights

March 3, 2021 Since 2001, sex workers, allies, and advocates have commemorated International Sex Worker Rights Day on March 3 in an effort to raise awareness of the human rights abuses...
Read More
Heroes of the Month: Scientists for Sex Worker Rights

Rhode Island Introduces Legislation Aimed at Protecting Sex Workers

March 8, 2021 DSW is pleased to be working with allies in Rhode Island on four bills critical to the health and safety of sex workers and communities as a...
Read More
Rhode Island Introduces Legislation Aimed at Protecting Sex Workers

Decriminalization News From Oregon and Louisiana

March 3, 2021: New Orleans District 91 State Representative Mandie Landry proposed a new bill decriminalizing prostitution in Louisiana on International Sex Workers’ Rights Day. Landry partnered with local sex worker rights...
Read More
Decriminalization News From Oregon and Louisiana

Mark Your Calendars

April 6, 2021: Equality New York (EQNY), a statewide advocacy organization working to advance equality and justice for LGBTQI New Yorkers and their families, will hold its 2021 Advocacy Day...
Read More
Mark Your Calendars
Heroes of the Month: Scientists for Sex Worker Rights Heroes of the Month: Scientists for...
Rhode Island Introduces Legislation Aimed at Protecting Sex Workers Rhode Island Introduces Legislation Aimed at...
Decriminalization News From Oregon and Louisiana Decriminalization News From Oregon and Louisiana
Mark Your Calendars Mark Your Calendars

DSW Newsletter Archive

Rhode Island Introduces Legislation Aimed at Protecting Sex Workers

March 8, 2021

DSW is pleased to be working with allies in Rhode Island on four bills critical to the health and safety of sex workers and communities as a whole! DSW’s Melissa Broudo and J. Leigh Oshiro-Brantly testified in support of the resolution and bills listed below.


House Resolution 5250: “Creating a special legislative commission to study ensuring racial equity and optimizing health and safety laws affecting marginalized individuals” was introduced on January 29 and the House Health & Human Services Committee recommended after a hearing on February 25 that the measure be held for future study. The resolution would create a special legislative commission to make a comprehensive study and provide recommendations on the health and safety impact of revising laws related to commercial sexual activity, identifying the methods of human trafficking and exploitation to develop strategies to reduce these activities, and ensuring accountability in the treatment of marginalized and targeted communities by police. The resolution is a response to laws that disproportionately impact women, transgender individuals, and people of color; to the documented increase in exploitation and violence against people in the sex industry in Rhode Island since the passage of federal legislation SESTA/FOSTA; and to the need to ensure justice and accountability in the way Rhode Island laws impact the state’s citizens.

Sponsors: Williams, Ajello, Vella-Wilkinson, Alzate, Henries, Morales

bill text


House Bill 5467: “An act relating to criminal offenses - criminal sexual activity” was introduced on February 10. After a hearing on March 9, the House Judiciary Committee recommended the measure be held for further study. The act would grant immunity from prosecution to people engaged in commercial sexual activity if they report to law enforcement that they are victims of or witnesses to a crime, ensuring that they feel safe in coming forward to report crimes and are able to report exploitation or violence committed against others.

Sponsors: Williams, Messier, Ajello, Slater, Felix, Alzate

bill text


House Bill 5464: “An act relating to health and safety - licensing of healthcare facilities” was introduced on February 10 and after a hearing on March 8, the House Health & Human Services Committee recommended the bill for further study. The act would prevent healthcare facilities from denying care to patients based on their age, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, race, color, marital status, familial status, disability, religion, national origin, source of income, and source of payment or profession.

Sponsors: Williams, Messier, Ajello, Vella-Wilkinson, Felix, Alzate

bill text


House Bill 6049 and Senate Bill 249: “An act relating to criminal offenses - sexual assault” would create a new criminal offense of “custodial sexual assault,” which occurs when a peace officer perpetrates a sexual assault while the victim is in their custody. The senate bill was introduced and referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee on February 10. The house bill was introduced on March 3, and the House Judiciary Committee recommended the measure be held for further study after a hearing on March 9.

Senate Sponsors: Bell, Calkin, Murray, Anderson, Goldin, Quezada, Cano, Mendes, Valverde, Acosta

House Sponsors: Henries, Felix, Hull, Lombardi, Kazarian, Cassar, Batista

bill text (senate)
bill text (house)

DSW Newsletter #24 (March 2021)

Heroes of the Month: Scientists for Sex Worker Rights

March 3, 2021 Since 2001, sex workers, allies, and advocates have commemorated International Sex Worker Rights Day on March 3 in an effort to raise awareness of the human rights abuses...
Read More
Heroes of the Month: Scientists for Sex Worker Rights

Rhode Island Introduces Legislation Aimed at Protecting Sex Workers

March 8, 2021 DSW is pleased to be working with allies in Rhode Island on four bills critical to the health and safety of sex workers and communities as a...
Read More
Rhode Island Introduces Legislation Aimed at Protecting Sex Workers

Decriminalization News From Oregon and Louisiana

March 3, 2021: New Orleans District 91 State Representative Mandie Landry proposed a new bill decriminalizing prostitution in Louisiana on International Sex Workers’ Rights Day. Landry partnered with local sex worker rights...
Read More
Decriminalization News From Oregon and Louisiana

Mark Your Calendars

April 6, 2021: Equality New York (EQNY), a statewide advocacy organization working to advance equality and justice for LGBTQI New Yorkers and their families, will hold its 2021 Advocacy Day...
Read More
Mark Your Calendars
Heroes of the Month: Scientists for Sex Worker Rights Heroes of the Month: Scientists for...
Rhode Island Introduces Legislation Aimed at Protecting Sex Workers Rhode Island Introduces Legislation Aimed at...
Decriminalization News From Oregon and Louisiana Decriminalization News From Oregon and Louisiana
Mark Your Calendars Mark Your Calendars

DSW Newsletter Archive

Decriminalization News From Oregon and Louisiana

March 3, 2021: New Orleans District 91 State Representative Mandie Landry proposed a new bill decriminalizing prostitution in Louisiana on International Sex Workers’ Rights Day. Landry partnered with local sex worker rights and domestic violence advocates to draft the legislation. Women With a Vision, a coalition that advocates for increased awareness around substance abuse and domestic violence in the lives of young and adult women, was critical to the introduction of the bill.

The justitification for House Bill No. 67 explains that the United States has one of the highest incarceration rates and that “… to begin a large-scale decarceration effort to reshape the American legal system by dramatically reducing the incarcerated population, decriminalization of sex work would need to be done.” The bill will be heard by the Legislature in Baton Rouge on April 12.


March 18, 2021: HB3088, currently in committee, was introduced to the Oregon State Legislature in February 2021 by Representative Rob Nosse. The bill was drafted in collaboration with local organizers who have long been advocating sex worker and trafficking survivor rights in the state. It decriminalizes both the sale and purchase of sex, repealing most of the “Prostitution and Related Offenses” section of Oregon’s criminal law, specifically Prostitution (§ 167.007), Commercial Sexual Solicitation (§ 167.008), and Promoting Prostitution (§ 167.012). The only law from that section remaining on the books would be Compelling Prostitution (§ 167.017). The bill also amends the entirety of Oregon’s Revised Statutes to remove or edit mention of prostitution laws; notably, prostitution convictions would no longer be grounds for eviction under § 90.396, nor would they be a bar to employment in schools under § 342.143 or residential home care under § 443.004. HB3088 would not only end the criminalization of sex work in Oregon, but it would remove barriers to housing and employment for those already criminalized.

Courtesy of Women With a Vision.

Courtesy of Rep. Mandie Landry.

Courtesy of Rep. Rob Nosse.

DSW Newsletter #24 (March 2021)

Heroes of the Month: Scientists for Sex Worker Rights

March 3, 2021 Since 2001, sex workers, allies, and advocates have commemorated International Sex Worker Rights Day on March 3 in an effort to raise awareness of the human rights abuses...
Read More
Heroes of the Month: Scientists for Sex Worker Rights

Rhode Island Introduces Legislation Aimed at Protecting Sex Workers

March 8, 2021 DSW is pleased to be working with allies in Rhode Island on four bills critical to the health and safety of sex workers and communities as a...
Read More
Rhode Island Introduces Legislation Aimed at Protecting Sex Workers

Decriminalization News From Oregon and Louisiana

March 3, 2021: New Orleans District 91 State Representative Mandie Landry proposed a new bill decriminalizing prostitution in Louisiana on International Sex Workers’ Rights Day. Landry partnered with local sex worker rights...
Read More
Decriminalization News From Oregon and Louisiana

Mark Your Calendars

April 6, 2021: Equality New York (EQNY), a statewide advocacy organization working to advance equality and justice for LGBTQI New Yorkers and their families, will hold its 2021 Advocacy Day...
Read More
Mark Your Calendars
Heroes of the Month: Scientists for Sex Worker Rights Heroes of the Month: Scientists for...
Rhode Island Introduces Legislation Aimed at Protecting Sex Workers Rhode Island Introduces Legislation Aimed at...
Decriminalization News From Oregon and Louisiana Decriminalization News From Oregon and Louisiana
Mark Your Calendars Mark Your Calendars

DSW Newsletter Archive

Heroes of the Month: Scientists for Sex Worker Rights

March 3, 2021

Since 2001, sex workers, allies, and advocates have commemorated International Sex Worker Rights Day on March 3 in an effort to raise awareness of the human rights abuses faced by sex workers worldwide. On this day, citing empirical evidence, researchers and scientists from around the world called on President Biden and Vice President Harris to support the decriminalization of sex work as part of their broader efforts toward legal justice reform. In an open letter, 250+ scholars and scientists called upon the Biden administration and all U.S. governors and legislators to reevaluate U.S. policies on sex work in their efforts toward legal justice reform.

Scientific evidence shows that decriminalizing consensual adult sex work reduces individual and social harms and increases safety, especially for marginalized populations. Four scientists kicked off the new campaign, Scientists for Sex Worker Rights (SFSWR), calling for fact-based policy-making, the decriminalization of consensual adult sex work, and the repeal of policies such as SESTA/FOSTA. The four organizers have Ph.D.s in sociology and hold academic posts at universities across the U.S. They are some of the nation's leading scholars of research on sexual commerce, and they have published numerous books and peer-reviewed articles on various aspects of the field.

“We decided to launch this campaign because, for too long, policies regarding sex work have been largely evidence-free, and we saw an urgent need to intervene in the debate by re-linking scientific research with public policy. And 250 researchers agreed and signed on to our letter,” said Ronald Weitzer, Ph.D., George Washington University, one of the four organizers of the Scientists for Sex Worker Rights campaign.

The majority of individuals involved in the sex trades are consenting adults. “The data clearly shows that criminalizing consensual adult sexual services causes severe harms, which fall mainly on the most marginalized groups — women, people of color, transgender and non-binary workers, workers with disabilities, and economically marginalized workers, and does not prevent or minimize violence or abuse ostensibly identified with human trafficking,” said Angela Jones, Ph.D., Farmingdale State College, State University of New York.

“The evidence now shows that the war on prostitution, even if intended to protect people, is backfiring. Study after study documents the negative impact criminalizing sex workers, their clients, and those who support them has had on the most marginalized communities. We can change that with science-based policies. Science should determine every single policy in this country, whether local, state or federal, intended to affect or protect anyone selling sex, whether by choice, circumstance or coercion,” noted Barb Brents, Ph.D., University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

Signatories represent some of the most published scholars and respected researchers in the field. They come from the U.S. and across the globe. Their research unequivocally shows that decriminalization has enormous benefits for public health and the safety of workers. Where sex work has been decriminalized, such as in New Zealand, there has been no increase in the prevalence of prostitution or trafficking since 2003, neither in the number of those providing commercial sex nor in those purchasing it; fewer reports of street-based sex workers, as many had moved indoors; increased reporting to the police of violence against sex workers; improved relations between police and sex workers; enhanced economic stability and labor conditions; better health outcomes for workers; and improved overall public health.

The letter applauds the administration’s “public commitment to science-driven policy” and implores the president, vice president, their administration, and congressional leaders to take immediate, specific actions such as “Support and advocate for Congressional bill S.3165 SESTA/FOSTA Examination of Secondary Effects for Sex Workers Study Act. … Given that a similar House bill, H.R.5448 SAFE SEX Workers Study Act, has been buried in committee since 12/18/2019, we are calling for serious action on the Senate study bill” because policies such as SESTA/FOSTA has had deleterious transnational effects on sex workers. The four organizers hope that governors and state legislators as well will heed the science on similar state-level bills. “President Biden and his administration have a historic opportunity to create a commission comprised of leading social scientists, NGOs, and grass-roots sex worker-led organizations to partner with Congressional leaders and advance new science-informed policies that empower and support all individuals engaged in sex work,” said Kate Korgan, Ph.D., University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

Campaign Organizers

Dr. Barbara (Barb) G. Brents has spent more than 25 years using a political economy lens to study politics, sex, and gender in market culture. She is considered one of the world’s leading academic experts on the sex industry and Nevada’s legal brothels. Her work applies research on sexual commerce to understand the politics of sexuality, the intersections of culture and economics; sexual markets and consumption; and the emotional and bodily labor of selling sex.

As a professor in the sociology department at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, since 1988, she has served as the department’s Graduate Coordinator for several years. She works with faculty in the Sexuality and Gender Studies Department, the Boyd School of Law, and various other departments in the College of Liberal Arts.

Brents’ research and teaching interests include political sociology, gender and sexuality, urban sociology, and public sociology. She teaches undergraduate classes on “Principles of Sociology” (online on WebCampus), “Sociology of Gender,” “Sex and Social Arrangements,” and graduate-level seminars, in “Political Sociology” and ”The Sociology of Sexuality.”

Barb Brents holds a Ph.D. in sociology from the University of Missouri-Columbia and a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the Missouri Journalism School. Barb Brents focuses on the sexual economy: the politics, culture, organization, markets, consumption and labor practices, surrounding various forms of sexual commerce. With a broader theoretical interest in the intersections of culture and economics, her publications, blogs and editorials include: the politics of sexuality, consumption, tourism and sexuality; and the emotional and bodily labor of selling sex, on topics, including Nevada’s legal brothel industry, the pornography industry and kink organizations.

Past research has also explored intersections of politics, culture, economics, and gender, looking at topics, such as the politics of terrorism and violence, business and social policies, and social sustainability in Las Vegas.

Most recently, Barb Brents has been the author and/or co-author of books and publications, including “Are Men Who Pay for Sex Sexist? Comparing Client Attitudes on Gender Role Equality, in Different Prostitution Markets,” in Men and Masculinities, “Violence and Legalized Brothel Prostitution in Nevada,” in the Journal of Interpersonal Violence, “The Mainstreaming of the Sex Industry: Economic Inclusion and Social Ambivalence,” in the Journal of Law & Society, and “EXPOsing Men’s Gender-Role Attitudes, as Porn Superfans,” in Sociological Forum.

She is involved in a number of collaborative projects with colleagues at UNLV, in the United Kingdom, Europe, Canada and Australia, exploring sexual commerce and consumption, and the politics and regulation of sexuality.

Her research has been published in scholarly peer-reviewed journals, including the American Sociological Review, Men and Masculinities, Sexualities, Sociological Perspectives, the Journal of Interpersonal Violence, Sexuality Research and Social Policy, the Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, and Social Science and Medicine.

She has, furthermore, worked with undergraduate and graduate students, on causes as diverse as sex worker rights, peace and justice, civil liberties, the environment, and a variety of women’s issues.

Dr. Angela Jones is associate professor of sociology at Farmingdale State College, State University of New York. Jones's research interests include African American political thought and protest, race, gender, sexuality, sex work, technology studies, feminist theory, and queer methodologies and theory. Jones is the author of Camming: Money, Power, and Pleasure in the Sex Industry (NYU Press, 2020) and African American Civil Rights: Early Activism and the Niagara Movement (Praeger, 2011). She is a co-editor of the three-volume After Marriage Equality book series (Routledge, 2018). Jones has also edited two other anthologies: The Modern African American Political Thought Reader: From David Walker to Barack Obama (Routledge, 2012) and A Critical Inquiry into Queer Utopias (Palgrave, 2013). She is also the author of numerous scholarly articles, which have been published in peer-reviewed journals.

Dr. Kate Hausbeck Korgan earned her Sociology Ph.D. in 1997 at the State University of New York at Buffalo, was tenured and promoted in the UNLV Department of Sociology in 2002, and served as associate dean of the graduate college from 2006 until 2007 when she was appointed senior associate dean. In 2013, Dr. Korgan was asked to serve as interim dean when the graduate college was moved to a stand-alone college reporting to the executive vice president & provost, after which she became dean of the graduate college in 2019.

A champion of diversity and equity, excellence and opportunity, and the powerful impact of innovative and interdisciplinary research, scholarship and creative activity, Dr. Korgan is deeply committed to creative problem-solving, collaboration, and servant leadership. Her mission is to provide outstanding service and support to students and faculty, and promote transformative educational experiences. Kate exemplifies these values in her graduate leadership through a sustained commitment to student-centered and data-driven decision making; encouraging participatory governance; building strong infrastructure to support graduate faculty; stimulating strategic growth and overall program excellence; implementing electronic/online systems to increase efficacy, efficiency, access to data, streamlined communications, and student success throughout the lifecycle; establishing a Dean’s Leadership Council and multiple advisory boards to ensure strong ties to the community; leading efforts to advocate for excellence in graduate education regionally and nationally; cultivating a strong graduate community of faculty, staff, and students on campus; founding the The Graduate Academy to provide comprehensive leadership, professional, and career development throughout the student lifecycle; and increasing financial resources to better support graduate student success.

As a scholar, Kate is a sociologist and social theorist with diverse methodological skills and expertise in the study of sex, gender, culture and sexual commerce. Together with Dr. Barb Brents and Dr. Crystal Jackson, Dr. Korgan co-authored The State of Sex: Tourism, Sex, and Sin in the New American Heartland (Routledge, 2010), an examination of America's only system of legalized prostitution: the Nevada brothels. With Dr. Alex Nelson and Antoinette Izzo, M.A., Dr. Korgan is currently studying business strategies and entrepreneurial practices of female online escorts in the United States, and the nexus between neoliberalism and sexualized culture. The research team’s website is EroticEntrepreneurs.com. Dr. Korgan has won multiple teaching awards and loves teaching undergraduate and graduate sociology classes and mentoring her students.

Dr. Ronald Weitzer received his Ph.D. in sociology from the University of California, Berkeley in 1985 and has been at George Washington University since 1988. He is a criminologist, and much of his research has investigated police-minority relations in the United States and in other nations (including Northern Ireland and South Africa). He is also an expert on the sex industry, with particular expertise on American policies and law enforcement on prostitution and sex trafficking. A recently completed project involved extensive field research on legal prostitution systems in Europe. For additional information, go to Ronald Weitzer’s Wikipedia page.

Continue to follow and help amplify the Scientists for Sex Worker Rights Campaign for Evidence-Based Policy (@SFSWR1) on Twitter!

Courtesy of Scientists for Sex Worker Rights.

DSW Newsletter #24 (March 2021)

Heroes of the Month: Scientists for Sex Worker Rights

March 3, 2021 Since 2001, sex workers, allies, and advocates have commemorated International Sex Worker Rights Day on March 3 in an effort to raise awareness of the human rights abuses...
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Rhode Island Introduces Legislation Aimed at Protecting Sex Workers

March 8, 2021 DSW is pleased to be working with allies in Rhode Island on four bills critical to the health and safety of sex workers and communities as a...
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Rhode Island Introduces Legislation Aimed at Protecting Sex Workers

Decriminalization News From Oregon and Louisiana

March 3, 2021: New Orleans District 91 State Representative Mandie Landry proposed a new bill decriminalizing prostitution in Louisiana on International Sex Workers’ Rights Day. Landry partnered with local sex worker rights...
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April 6, 2021: Equality New York (EQNY), a statewide advocacy organization working to advance equality and justice for LGBTQI New Yorkers and their families, will hold its 2021 Advocacy Day...
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March 3, 2021: International Sex Workers Rights Day

International Sex Worker Rights Day began in 2001 when over 25,000 sex workers gathered in India for a festival organized by a Calcutta-based group called Durbar Mahila Samanwaya Committee (Unstoppable Women’s Synthesis Committee). In 2002, Durbar invited organizations from around the world to join them in commemorating Sex Worker Rights Day on March 3rd.

Since 2002, sex workers and advocates around the world have organized protests, gatherings, film screenings, art shows, and lectures on and around March 3 to raise awareness about the human rights abuses sex workers face. Sex worker organizing extends across the globe, with efforts aimed at demanding recognition of sex worker autonomy, freedom from criminalization, and legal protection from violence and abuse. Ultimately, March 3rd provides an opportunity to shine a spotlight on sex worker activism, resilience, community, and strength, and away from salaciousness, violations and paternalism.

— SWOP USA

March 8, 2021: International Women’s Strike

Also known as Paro Internacional de Mujeres, the International Women’s Strike is a world-wide movement coordinated between more than 50 countries each year to recognize International Women’s Day (IWD). Last year, DSW’s Ceyenne Doroshow collaborated with the NYC chapter of IWD to coordinate “Our bodies, Our Labor, Our streets!”, celebrating gender and labor justice. 

Though this year the pandemic prevents a gathering of this nature, we are no less committed to honoring this day and the incredible work of female-identifying activists and advocates who fight everyday for a better, safer, and more equitable world. Follow IWD NYC on Facebook for more information.

March 8, 2021: International Women’s Day

International Women’s Day (IWD) is celebrated annually on March 8th to recognize the social, economic, and political achievements of women world-wide. For IWD 2021, the global movement has chosen #ChooseToChallenge as this year’s theme. In the last year, we have been forced to confront the critical and ever-growing reality of how interconnected our lives are, even from oceans away. It is our responsibility to confront the persistent injustice, inequity, and violence in the systems that we all participate in.

A challenged world is an alert world. Individually, we're all responsible for our own thoughts and actions — all day, every day. We can all choose to challenge and call out gender bias and inequality. We can all choose to seek out and celebrate women's achievements. Collectively, we can all help create an inclusive world. From challenge comes change, so let's all choose to challenge.

— IWD 2021

Join this movement on social media this March 8 and submit your #ChooseToChallenge images to show your commitment to “challenge inequality, call out bias, question stereotypes, and help forge an inclusive world.”

Please follow DSW’s social media channels where we’ll post additional information on how to commemorate these dates as it becomes available.

Courtesy of International Women's Day.

DSW Newsletter #23 (February 2021)

Hero of the Month: Miss Major Griffin-Gracy

February 16, 2021 Miss Major Griffin-Gracy, known as Miss Major, and most affectionately as “Mama” to many is the personification of perseverance; but Miss Major did more than just endure,...
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Hero of the Month: Miss Major Griffin-Gracy

A Victory Decades in the Making: New York Repeals the Walking While Trans Ban

February 3, 2021 After nearly fifty years of wreaking havoc on marginalized communities, the criminalization of loitering for the purpose of engaging in a prostitution offense was finally repealed in...
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A Victory Decades in the Making: New York Repeals the Walking While Trans Ban

The Truth About the Equality Model

February 20, 2021 Sex workers in countries where the Equality Model1 has been implemented are frequently harassed and threatened by law enforcement. Execution of the policy often involves police raids...
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February 5, 2021 Charleston Law School invited DSW’s legal director, Melissa Broudo, to join their 13th Annual Law Symposium - SEXUAL ABUSE AND SEX TRAFFICKING: PROTECTING CHILDREN, SUPPORTING VICTIMS, AND...
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March 3, 2021: International Sex Workers Rights Day International Sex Worker Rights Day began in 2001 when over 25,000 sex workers gathered in India for a festival organized by a...
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