Prostitution: The Facts
FACT 1: Prostitution is not an issue of 'choice' - most women enter prostitution because of lack of choice and many are coerced by pimps or traffickers.
FACT 2: Prostitution is not about sex. It is about exploitation, violence and abuse.
FACT 3: Prostitution is harmful in and of itself: legalisation or complete decriminalisation of the entire industry doesn't remove the harm of prostitution– it simply makes that harm legal.
FACT 4: Prostitution does not need to be legalised or completely decriminalised to provide better protection for women.
FACT 5: There is broad consensus that those who sell or are sold for sexual use should be completely decriminalised.
FACT 6: Treating prostitution as ordinary work does not remove the stigma.
FACT 7: Legalising indoor prostitution does not make women safer.
FACT 8: Legalising prostitution or decriminalising the entire industry sends out a message to new generations of boys and men that women are objects for sexual use and that prostitution is harmless fun.
FACT 9: Legalisation or decriminalisation of the entire industry expands prostitution and traficking for sexual exploitation.
FACT 10: Tackling demand for prostitution decreases prostitution and trafficking for sexual exploitation.
Download the Demand Change! PROSTITUTION: FACT OR FICTION? Fact sheet here
References:
Baklinski, Thaddeus (2007) Swedish Prostitution Ban An Apparent Enormous Success. Accessed at http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2007/nov/07111506.html
Bindel, Julie and Kelly, Liz (2004) A Critical Examination of Responses to Prostitution in Four Countries: Victoria-Australia, Ireland, The Netherlands, Sweden. Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit, London Metropolitan University.
Ekberg, Gunilla (2008) Summary of Speech given at a conference organised by the Coalition Against Trafficking in Women Asia-Pacific (CATW AP), April 25 2008, Manila, the Philippines.
Farley , M. (2003). Prostitution and Trafficking in Nine Countries: An Update on Violence and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. Journal of Trauma Practice, Vol. 2, No. 3/4, 2003, pp.33-74.
Frey, Lynne and Rick Frey (2008) Not in My Daughter’s Name. Accessed at http://www.orato.com/node/12087&page=14Philadelphia: The Haworth Press Inc.
Home Office (2006) A coordinated prostitution strategy and a summary of responses to ‘Paying the price’. London: UK Government.
Home Office (2004) Solutions and strategies: Drug problems and street sex markets. London: UK Government.
Inston, Tighe and Margerison, Ruth (2007) Shadow Report for the CEDAW Committee on New Zealand, Coalition Against Trafficking in Women New Zealand (CATW NZ)
Melrose, M. (2002), Ties that bind – Young People and the Prostitution Labour Market in Britain, presented at Fourth Feminist Research Conference, Bologna: September 2000 (www.women.it/cyberarchive/files/melrose.htm)
Ramsay, R. et al (1993). Psychiatric Morbidity in Survivors of Organized State Violence Including Torture. 162:55-59, British Journal of Psychiatry