Decriminalize Consensual Sex Work in Massachusetts
Status: Loss
Decriminalizing consensual sex work is the safer, healthier, and more humane path for Massachusetts.
As an organization advocating for the wellbeing, agency, and autonomy of LGBTQ+ people, GLAD supports An Act to Promote the Health and Safety of People in the Sex Trade (H.1867) to fully decriminalize consensual sex work.
LGBTQ people face disproportionate harassment from police, and violence and mistreatment when incarcerated. The criminalization of consensual sex work can lead to increased police interaction whether an individual is engaged in sex work or simply perceived to be.
Transphobia and homophobia still lead to family rejection, homelessness, and poverty for too many LGBTQ people, and criminalizing what can be a critical survival option for some only compounds those harms. Criminalization forces many to work in hidden or remote places where they are more vulnerable to violence.
It also impedes sex workers’ ability to negotiate condom use and safer sex practices, to seek help when they are targets of violence or harassment, or to set boundaries for their autonomy, health, and protection. Research also shows that criminalizing consensual sex work subverts efforts to protect individuals from trafficking, exploitation, and abuse by making it dangerous for victims to speak out.
Read GLAD’s testimony from December 14, 2021.
For more information about how to support the bill, visit Black & Pink Massachusetts’ Advocacy Toolkit.
Related Content
-
An update on the fight for LGBTQ+ rights
Read MoreWe are fighting tireless to protect our hard-won rights and push back against efforts to control our lives and our most personal decisions.
-
Gender-neutral “X” Designation on Massachusetts Identification
Read MoreWe should all be able to have government documents that accurately reflect who we are.