Sex work is illegal in most of the United States, but the debate over decriminalizing it is heating up.
Former California Attorney General and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris recently came out
in favor of decriminalizing it
The debate is hardly new — and it's fraught with emotions. Opponents of decriminalization say it's an exploitative industry that preys on the weak. But many activists and academics say decriminalization would help protect sex workers, and would even be a public health benefit.
RJ Thompson wants to push back against the idea that sex work is inherently victimizing. He says for him it was liberating: He had recently graduated from law school and started working at a nonprofit when the recession hit. In 2008, he got laid off with no warning and no severance, and he had massive student loan debt.
Thompson became an escort. "I made exponentially more money than I ever could have in my legal profession," he says.
He says the possibility of arrest was often on his mind. And he says for many sex workers, it's a constant fear. "Many street-based workers are migrants or transgender people who have limited options in the formal economies," he says. "And so they do sex work for survival. And it puts them in a very vulnerable position — the fact that it's criminalized."
Thompson is now a human rights lawyer and the managing director of the
Sex Workers Project
Due to its clandestine nature in America, it's extremely hard to find reliable numbers about the sex trade. But one thing is for sure: It's a multi-billion-dollar industry. In 2007, a
government-sponsored report
Economist Allison Schrager says the Internet has increased demand and supply. "Women who pre-Internet (or men) who wouldn't walk the streets or sign with a madam or an agency now can sell sex work, sometimes even on the side to supplement other sources of income," she says.
So what happens when you take this massive underground economy and decriminalize it? Nevada might offer a clue. Brothels are legal there, in certain counties.
In Shrager's book,
An Economist Walks Into A Brothel
"Sex work is risky for everyone," she says. "You take on a lot of risk as a customer too. And when you're working in a brothel you are assured complete anonymity. They've been fully screened for diseases."
In fact, activists say, decriminalization is a public health issue.
Take
the case of Rhode Island
Baylor University economist Scott Cunningham and his colleagues found that during those years the sex trade grew. But Cunningham points to some
other important findings
Rhode Island made sex work illegal again in 2009, in part under pressure from some anti-trafficking advocates. That's the thing: The debate about sex work always gets linked to trafficking — people who get forced into it against their will.
Economist Axel Dreher from the University of Heidelberg in Germany teamed up with the London School of Economics to analyze
the link between trafficking and prostitution laws
It's a controversial study: Even Dreher admits that reliable data on sex trafficking is really hard to find.
Human rights organizations including
Amnesty International
Cecilia Gentili says she might have been able to break free of coerced sex work much sooner had it not been for fear of legal consequences. She left her native Argentina because she was being brutally harassed by police in her small town. She thought she'd be better off when she moved to New York, but as a transgender, undocumented immigrant, she says she had few options.
"Let's be realistic," Gentili says, "for people like me, sex work is not 'one' job option. It's the only option."
Gentili says that when police busted the drug house in Brooklyn where she was being held, she debated whether to ask for help. She figured she was in a very vulnerable position, as a trans, undocumented person. She stayed quiet.
These days Gentili is the director of policy at
GMHC
But many believe the sex industry is just fundamentally vicious and decriminalizing it will make it worse. Rachel Lloyd is the founder of
Girls Educational and Mentoring Services
"The commercial sex industry is inherently [exploitative]," she says. "The folks who end up in the commercial sex industry are the folks who are the most vulnerable and the most desperate."
When she was a teenager, Lloyd sold sex in Germany, where it's legal. But she says that didn't make it any less brutal for her.
"Those power dynamics of exploitation were still there," she says. "When ... legal johns came in, they were the ones with the money."
Lloyd says she doesn't want sex workers to be persecuted or punished. But she doesn't think men should be allowed to buy sex legally. She says that would be condoning the same industry that brutalized her and the women she works with today.
But decriminalization activists say that sex work has and always will exist. And they say bringing it out of the shadows can only help.
Copyright 2019 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.