Δες εδώ που δείχνει και τις δυο απόψεις. Για το decriminalization αναφέρει:EKPLIKTIKOS έγραψε: ↑28 Σεπ 2023, 13:16Ε άμα βαριέσαι να γκουγκλαρεις τι περιμένεις να σου πω; κυριολεκτικά πρώτο αποτέλεσμα ξέρω γω, συγγνώμη τώρα αλλά δε θα σε μορφωσω εγώ, δεν είναι δουλειά μου. Βάλε στο Google prostitution και sex trafficking, δες τα αποτελέσματα έγκυρων πηγών, της Unesco για παράδειγμα ή από έγκυρα εκπαιδευτικά ιδρύματα, ή ξεκινά από εδώ ξέρω γω
https://2001-2009.state.gov/r/pa/ei/rls/38790.htm
Women and children want to escape prostitution
The vast majority of women in prostitution don’t want to be there. Few seek it out or choose it, and most are desperate to leave it. A 2003 study first published in the scientific Journal of Trauma Practice found that 89 percent of women in prostitution want to escape.[1]
Να τι αναφέρει και ο φίλος σας ο ΣόροςOther drivers of the increasing public and governmental support for decriminalizing prostitution exist:
Clear evidence from around the world shows improved health outcomes. Studies in settings where prostitution is criminalized have reported higher drug use, lower condom usage, higher STI rates, and a host of other negative health outcomes as compared to settings that have decriminalized or legalized it. Studies have shown access to and utilization of health services among sex workers is also significantly better where prostitution is decriminalized.
Decriminalization can also improve worker protection and labor rights. Redirection of the attention to the occupational dimension of prostitution may enable sex workers to secure labor rights, unemployment benefits, health care, and life insurance if sex work is decriminalized.
Decriminalization also improves safety for sex workers. Human Rights Watch has consistently found in research across various countries that criminalization makes sex workers more vulnerable to violence, including rape, assault, and murder. Criminals may see sex workers as easy targets because they are unlikely to receive help from the police and, in fact, intentionally avoid the police. Criminalization of prostitution exposes sex workers to abuse and exploitation by law enforcement officials, such as police officers. Reports of extortion, harassment, and physical and verbal abuse of sex workers by police officers are common. Sex workers will be more likely to secure police protection to deal with threatening or violent situations. Criminalization further marginalizes sex workers, by pushing them underground. For example, in Sweden, where the Nordic model originated, sex workers say the policy resulted in sex work shifting to clients’ homes because of fears of clients being arrested. But this shift means that sex workers have fewer escape options if a client becomes violent. It also undermines sex workers’ ability to seek justice for crimes against them. A 2014 report by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) found that decriminalization of prostitution contributed to a large decrease in rapes.
The opposition to the decriminalization of prostitution suggests that the anticipated benefits of decriminalization have been exaggerated. Critics cite research examining the experiences of sex workers that points to the inherently marginalizing and violent nature of the profession itself, suggesting that decriminalization is not the magic solution that has been suggested.
For instance, in New Zealand, where sex work is decriminalized, one study that utilized qualitative interviews conducted with sex workers in the city of Christchurch revealed that a majority of them did not feel that decriminalization has curbed the violence that they experience. Even in areas where prostitution is decriminalized, sex workers may confront exceptional risks of assault and murder. Similarly, it has been found in Austria and Netherlands that legalizing and regulating sex work has not decreased the prevalence of the illegal, underground practices of the sex industry, therefore suggesting that the abusive work environments of sex workers have not improved. In fact, despite legalization efforts in countries such as Netherlands and Denmark, licensed brothels did not welcome regulatory inspections, and sex workers still had to resort to anonymity, secrecy, and informal cash transfers. However, more recent evidence indicates that there are highly frequent inspections, as well as sanctions for non-compliance.
Conclusion
In the real world, sex work legislation is much more complex and nuanced and “not monolithic." Decriminalization, and criminalization policies and implications will rarely be identical from country to country. For example, the selling of sex is considered legal in both Bangladesh and Netherlands. However, the Netherlands enforces a high level of organization and regulation, while Bangladesh has a much more informal sex work industry. Moreover, the legality of sex work can vary not only between countries but also within them, across different legal jurisdictions. Countries like the United States, Mexico, El Salvador, and Australia demonstrate such regional variations.
https://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/ ... e-sex-work
Εντωμεταξύ κάθε φορά που σε κάποια χώρα πάει να γίνει πιο αυστηρή η νομοθεσία έχουμε αυτό:
Επιπλέον, στις χώρες που η πορνεία έχει γίνει παράνομη, εξακολουθεί να υφίσταται ως παράνομη.
Τέλος, εσύ δεν λες το ίδιο με τον foscilis, ο foscilis θεωρεί ότι είναι βιασμός ακόμη κι αν η ιερόδουλη σε παρακαλά γονατιστή να την πληρώσεις και να πας μαζί της.