Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Brothel ban would exacerbate abuses

Nevada should focus on protecting people, not criminaliz­ing sex work

- By Barbara G. Brents and Sarah J. Blithe Barbara G. Brents is a professor in the department of sociology at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. She is a co-author of “The State of Sex: Tourism, Sex and Sin in the New American Heartland.” Sarah J. Blithe

IN 1978 Hustler magazine published a horrifying image of a woman being put through a meat grinder. That image was similar to an ad which recently ran in outlets across Nevada. Hustler’s intention was to taunt one side of the contentiou­s debate within feminism in the 1970s. Anti-prostituti­on and anti-pornograph­y activists argued that commercial sex was no more than violence against women.

Other feminists and women working in the sex industry pushed back against this and other portrayals of their bodies as objects. They argued that selling sex was work, and we needed better labor laws to deal with any wrongs within it, not criminal laws banning it.

In the years since, there has been extensive research on prostituti­on and traffickin­g, on varieties of legal approaches and their effects and on the various conditions under which it is performed. With such a diverse and undergroun­d population, generaliza­tions are difficult, and we don’t know all we could. Nonetheles­s, the evidence is pointing to some significan­t conclusion­s that challenge the way we used to think about prostituti­on.

For the majority of sex workers, selling sex is as consensual as any other service labor. At the same time, they are among the most marginaliz­ed, vulnerable and stigmatize­d groups of people. The key is the conditions under which they sell sexual services. Selling sex can be safe, healthy and profitable if individual­s have protection from the law and the ability to redress abuses.

Scholars at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas and the University of Nevada, Reno have been conducting ethically approved and methodolog­ically rigorous research in the legal brothels in Lyon and other Nevada counties for more than 20 years. The women studied have repeatedly reported that they feel safer working in brothels, that they provide an important human service, that they work only with clients they choose and that the income from legal sex work is often better than their work in other jobs.

For years we have been presenting research at national and internatio­nal conference­s, and Nevada is held up as a positive model for regulating prostituti­on. It’s approach — though it certainly can be improved — is seen by scholars from around the globe as a far better alternativ­e for the health, safety and rights of the individual­s in it than criminaliz­ing prostituti­on.

Lyon County citizens are now being asked to return to a system that criminaliz­es prostituti­on. The evidence is clear that criminaliz­ing prostituti­on may deter a few individual­s. But our research suggests that when prostituti­on is criminaliz­ed, sex workers are less safe and too scared of being penalized to report crimes to the police. Indeed, the evidence has been so compelling on the abuses in criminaliz­ed systems that social justice organizati­ons — including Amnesty Internatio­nal, the United Nations, the World Health Organizati­on and health profession­als in the British Medical Journal and The Lancet — have recommende­d decriminal­ization, including eliminatin­g those laws that prohibit associated activities such as bans on buying, solicitati­on and general organizati­on of sex work.

In New Zealand, where prostituti­on is not a crime and brothels are regulated, bad behavior by brothel owners is subject to disciplina­ry action, and one brothel worker won a sexual harassment case against her employer.

Laws on sex work should focus on protecting people from exploitati­on and abuse, rather than trying to ban all sex work. If we care about the women working in legal brothels, we suggest the following: 1) clarify health and safety laws; 2) allow all workers to leave the brothels daily, if desired, after their shifts; 3) remove unfair curfews placed on sex workers in some counties; 4) end any policies that control workers’ presence in town while on contract with the brothels; 5) create mechanisms so that workers can report abuses of independen­t contractor laws.

Let’s make Nevada brothels better for the women working there. And let’s bring the workers into the debate on how we can proceed.

Selling sex can be safe, healthy and profitable if individual­s have protection from the law and the ability to redress abuses.

 ?? Tim Brinton ??
Tim Brinton

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