被排除在外但仍在战斗:欧盟反人口贩运决策中性工作者及其盟友的声音在哪里?

Irena Ferčíková Konečná
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摘要

通过打击人口贩运的辩论,"杜绝需求 "的卖淫方式在欧洲不断涌现,并在国际议程上受到越来越多的关注。众所周知,改善工人权利、提高工会组织和集体谈判的覆盖率是解决人口贩运问题的有效战略。然而,在性剥削问题上,重点并不在这些战略上,而是在刑事司法系统的帮助下废除整个性产业。在《巴勒莫议定书》(2000 年)签署后的第一个十年,国际组织(IGOs)推动以人权为基础的方法来解决人口贩运问题,旨在平衡议定书的刑事司法重点。这项工作指导各国如何在打击人口贩运的同时维护和保护人权。然而,性工作/卖淫这一爆炸性问题被最小化了,由于对人口贩运的定义和国家义务的共识还很脆弱,政府间组织回避了这一话题。与此同时,全球和整个欧洲的性工作者团体和工会在没有资金和资源或资金和资源非常有限的情况下,在其工作、经验和专业知识得不到认可的情况下,就如何解决普遍存在的定罪、歧视、暴力和剥削问题制定了自己的战略。本文介绍了欧洲性工作者权利联盟(ESWA)和其他性工作者权利民间组织如何以欧洲反人口贩运为名,试图挑战 "终结需求 "话语和性工作刑事化的有害影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Excluded but Fighting: Where Are the Voices of Sex Workers and Their Allies in EU Anti-Trafficking Policymaking?
The ‘end demand’ approach to prostitution has been popping up in Europe through the anti-trafficking debate and receives increasing attention on the international agenda. It is well recognized that improving workers’ rights, increasing unionization and collective bargaining coverage are effective strategies for tackling trafficking. However, with regard to sexual exploitation, focus is not on these strategies but instead on the abolition of the entire sex industry with the help of criminal justice systems. In first decade after the Palermo Protocol (2000), international organizations (IGOs) promoted a human rights-based approach to tackling trafficking, aiming to balance the criminal justice focus of the protocol. This work guided states on how to maintain and protect human rights while combating human trafficking. However, the explosive issue of sex work/prostitution was minimized, with IGOs avoiding the topic due to the fragile consensus about the definition of human trafficking and state obligations. Meanwhile, sex workers’ collectives and unions globally and throughout Europe developed their own strategies on how to address widespread criminalization, discrimination, violence and exploitation, with no or very limited funding and resources—and without recognition of their work, experience and expertise. This article presents how the European Sex Workers’ Rights Alliance (ESWA) and other sex workers’ rights civil society organizations have sought to challenge the harmful impacts of the ‘end demand’ discourse and the criminalization of sex work in the name of anti-trafficking in Europe.
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