Webinar: It’s More than Money, Oct 8, 2021

As sex worker rights ascend, many groups are interested in supporting this work. Find out the best practices in providing funding.


About this event

Friday October 8, 2021: 2 pm US Eastern / 11 am US Pacific / 8 pm Central European Time

BPPP is inviting granters, program managers for grants, board members of foundations, mutual aid and community based sex worker funds/ programs and our community to hear presentations and discuss what sex workers really need in our current times. As sex worker rights ascend, many groups are interested in supporting this work or are already doing so. Find out the best practices in providing funding and support. We will turn preconceptions about sex workers and funding around so that audience members can go out with a fresh mind set to do even better work.

REGISTER HERE: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/its-more-than-money-tickets-171202139207

The BSWC Statement

The Black Sex Worker Collective has released a statement in response to Uganda’s persecution of our siblings through the Anti-homosexuality Bill of 2021. The statement begins as follows:

Uganda’s anti-gay agenda is nothing short of an instance of neocolonialism and the Ugandan government has failed a large swath of its population by once again succumbing to colonial influence. Scott Lively, Exodus International (a failed American ex-gay lobby), and the Ugandan parliament, we, the Black Sex Workers Collective, condemn the hateful roots you have sown. The blood of innocent Ugandans is on your hands. The government has once again neglected sexual diversity in collaboration with a lobby group that failed to gain traction in their own country. We call on the Ugandan government to reject this harmful colonial export. This collaboration in bigotry builds on instead of dismantles the anti-gay agenda of the British imposed Ugandan Penal Code Act of 1950. We will support our Ugandan siblings in fighting for their rights to life and liberty.

Read the full statement here.

Sex Workers Unite on International Whores Day: Global Solidarity with Ugandan Activists

Join us on June 2, 2021 at 12.30 pm in NYC in front of the Ugandan Embassy (336 E 45th St, New York, NY 10017) and show solidarity with Ugandan sex worker led groups that are working to protect the rights of sex workers by asking everyone to reject the Ugandan Sexual Offences Bill of 2021. This new legislation harshly affects sex workers, criminalizing brothels, engaging in prostitution and engaging in a sexual act with a sex worker. The legislation also criminalizes  ‘carnal knowledge against the order of nature” fueling anti-LGBTQ discrimination and heteronormative policing of sexuality. Download a statement from Ugandan Sex Workers and download a statement from the BSWC.

We cannot stay silent with the rights of sex workers and allied communities are under attack. Bring signs and banners in support of sex workers and LGBTQ communities for this short and sweet action that will show our colleagues in Uganda that we are in support of them.

Why do we protest on June 2? Protest is the very basis of June 2 actions as the date goes back to the 1970s when sex workers occupied a church in Lyon, France. It is known globally as “International Whores Day.”

Date of action: June 2, 2021

Time: 12.30 pm to 1.30 pm

Location: 336 E 45th St, New York, NY 10017

Accoutrement: Make a sign! Bring your voice and music. Wear purple to be in solidarity with workers worldwide and bring red umbrellas.

PRESS RELEASE

Contacts: N’Jaila Rhee and Jiselle Parker – newjerseyrua@gmail.com, Penelope Saunders – bestpracticespolicyproject@gmail.com, Cris Sardina – director@desireealliance.org, Akynos – blacksexworkercollective@gmail.com, Monica Jones – theoutlawprojectinc@gmail.com

Sex Worker Rights Groups have told the United Nations how the U.S. violates human rights: here is how the US Government responded

Newark, NJ – April 27th, 2021  – This week our coalition of sex worker rights organizations is releasing a response to the United States response to the Third Cycle 36th Session Universal Periodic Review (UPR) at the United Nations. The UPR is held every five years to hold member countries responsible for their human rights records and provides one of the only ways that our communities can shine a light on rights violations going on inside the U.S. In March the United States formally responded to 347 recommendations about human rights made by the international community, accepting 280 (whole and in part) of them.

“The current U.S. administration has the opportunity to take progressive measures in identifying how people labor, how people survive, and their lived realities,” says Cris Sardina of Desiree Alliance, adding that,“there should be nothing about us without us and the United States needs to consult with sex worker rights leadership to make the changes needed to make the accepted recommendations meaningful.” 

“Black trans people in the United States are facing catastrophic levels of police brutality,” says Monica Jones, founder of the Arizona-based Outlaw Project. “We are pleased that member states of the UN have provided such clear recommendations regarding current policing practices targeting transgender people and that the U.S. accepted them. It is now time to make those recommendations matter by ending the violence experienced in our communities.”

“Ten years ago the U.S. accepted UPR Recommendation 86, requiring it to take action to address the vulnerability of sex workers and transgender people to violence and human rights abuses,” comments Penelope Saunders of the Best Practices Policy Project (BPPP). “We are gratified to see the U.S. accept new recommendations about police brutality targeting people of African descent, human rights abuses faced by transgender people, abuses of migrants, the impact of COVID-19, and gender based violence. However, these commitments will remain unfulfilled and Recommendation 86 will remain words on a page until the United States takes action.”

Previously in 2019, the Outlaw Project, Desiree Alliance, BPPP, the Black Sex Worker Collective, and New Jersey Red Umbrella Alliance submitted a shadow report to the United Nations about rights violations and then spent a year meeting with policy makers despite the barriers of the pandemics of COVID19 and anti-Black police violence.
To download a full copy of the 2021 response report pls visit: http://www.bestpracticespolicy.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Post-Report-Responses-to-the-Third-Cycle-36th-Session-of-the-Universal-Periodic-Review-.pdf