Publicaciones y Herramientas

Hemos organizado nuestra creciente biblioteca de publicaciones y herramientas para servir mejor al movimiento de lxs trabajadorxs sexuales, a los financiadores y a lxs aliadxs. Hemos destacado los temas clave que se cruzan con nuestro trabajo, incluyendo la concesión participativa de subvenciones, los buscadores de donantes y otros trabajos aportados por las redes regionales, los financiadores de lxs trabajadorxs sexuales y otras organizaciones que apoyan los derechos de lxs trabajadorxs sexuales.

Hay casi 200 publicaciones y herramientas enumeradas, hemos confiado en las herramientas de traducción en línea para hacerlas más accesibles en otros idiomas. Por favor, disculpe cualquier error.

Ankit Gupta (Red Umbrella Fund’s ISC Co-Chair) and Erin Williams (formerly with SWDC member Global Fund for Women) write about their key learnings in funding sex workers rights at Global Fund for Women – This has included a vibrant Sex Work 101 Teach-In that was facilitated by the Red Umbrella Fund. «We share our journey in the hopes that it might spark action among fellow funders.»

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The Kua ‘ana Project is at the intersection of public health, decriminalization, Indigenous rights, and the rights of trans and gender expansive people as they serve the Pasifika trans women and sex workers in Honolulu. Maddalyn Sesepasara, who leads the project, explains that steady allyship means that organizations like hers have enough funding to support both direct service and advocacy efforts, which are equally important.

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In 2020 Inside Philanthropy published an article by leaders at RSF focusing on shifting the power in philanthropy. RSF is a financial services organization that ?has formed a growing community of motivated, values-driven investors, donors, and entrepreneurs. Together, we are committed to transforming an unjust and extractive economy to one that brings healing and regeneration.?

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«Human Rights Watch has conducted research on sex work around the world, including in Cambodia, China, Tanzania, the United States, and most recently, South Africa. The research, including extensive consultations with sex workers and organizations that work on the issue, has shaped the Human Rights Watch policy on sex work: Human Rights Watch supports the full decriminalization of consensual adult sex work.»

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This guideance note…is practical guidance for addressing the significant unmet needs and vulnerabilities of displaced persons engaging in sex work. It is a starting point. More detailed and comprehensive guidance is warranted and should be developed in the near future; it should be the product of thoughtful consultation and research, a collaborative process in which affected individuals and experts from across humanitarian and non-humanitarian communities participate.

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This 2017 research paper by DemandAT «takes a comprehensive approach to investigating demand and demand-side policies in the context of trafficking. The research includes a strong theoretical and conceptual component through an examination of the concept of demand in trafficking from a historical and economic perspective. Regulatory approaches are studied in policy areas that address demand in illicit markets, in order to develop a better understanding of the impact that the different regulatory approaches can have on demand. Demand-side arguments in different fields of trafficking, as well as demand-side policies of selected countries are examined, in order to provide a better understanding of the available policy options and impacts. Finally, the research also involves in-depth case studies; both of the particular fields in which trafficking occurs (domestic work, prostitution, the globalised production of goods) and of particular policy approaches (law enforcement and campaigns). The overall goal is to develop a better understanding of demand and demand-factors in the context of designing measures and policies addressing all forms of trafficking in human beings.»

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