Law A new Belgium law gives sex workers contracts, benefits and safety protection

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BY TOM NOUVIAN
Updated 12:35 PM BRT, December 1, 2024


PARIS (AP) — Starting Sunday, sex workers in Belgium will be able to sign formal employment contracts and gain labor rights on par with those in other professions in a legal breakthrough some call a “revolution.”
The new law also establishes fundamental rights for sex workers including the right to refuse clients, choose their practices and stop an act at any moment.

The move follows the country’s 2022 decision to decriminalize sex work.

Under the new regulations, sex workers will have access to health insurance, paid leave, maternity benefits, unemployment support and pensions. The legislation also establishes rules on working hours, pay and safety measures, addressing a long-standing gap in legal protections for those in the industry.

“This is an incredible step forward,” said Isabelle Jaramillo, coordinator of Espace P, an advocacy group involved in drafting the legislation. “It means their profession can finally be recognized as legitimate by the Belgian state.”
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“From the employer’s perspective, this will also be a revolution. They’ll have to apply for a state authorization to hire sex workers,” Jaramillo said.

“Under the previous legislation, hiring someone for sex work automatically made you a pimp, even if the arrangement was consensual,” said Jaramillo. “Now, They’ll have to apply for state authorization to hire employees.”

Employers must now obtain authorization, adhere to strict safety protocols, and meet background requirements, including no prior convictions for sexual assault or human trafficking. They must provide clean linens, condoms, and hygiene products, and install emergency buttons in workspaces.

Independent sex work remains permitted, but unregulated third-party hiring or violations of the legal framework will be prosecuted.
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- Whats the name of this movie?
Critics argue the law cannot fully address the stigma and risks tied to the trade, especially for undocumented sex workers.

“There’s still a lot of work to be done,” said Jaramillo, emphasizing the need for better police and judicial training to protect marginalized workers.

While countries such as Germany and the Netherlands have legalized sex work, none have implemented labor protections as comprehensive as Belgium’s.

https://apnews.com/article/belgium-...ction-health-2f935f414572517d74a46c682419f20b
 
i read a book recently that showed no benefits to women after making sex work legal. sex trafficking trucked right along and women were still abused nearly as much....

I don't know anything about this specific policy and approach but its not typically the panacea people think it is.
 
i read a book recently that showed no benefits to women after making sex work legal. sex trafficking trucked right along and women were still abused nearly as much....

I don't know anything about this specific policy and approach but its not typically the panacea people think it is.
Can't be worse than working for Amazon
 
sounds like a declaration that “sex workers” in Belgium expect to be paid and not put out

Sounds backwards.

 
i read a book recently that showed no benefits to women after making sex work legal. sex trafficking trucked right along and women were still abused nearly as much....

I don't know anything about this specific policy and approach but its not typically the panacea people think it is.
They don't make it legal to help the women, they make it legal to tax them.
 
i read a book recently that showed no benefits to women after making sex work legal. sex trafficking trucked right along and women were still abused nearly as much....

I don't know anything about this specific policy and approach but its not typically the panacea people think it is.
Was it Half the Sky?
 
Was it Half the Sky?
No, I think it was "American Psychosis". Chris hedges.

But I read a bunch of books in that time and kind of jumbled them together. But I think that's it. There's a whole chapter on prostitution..
 
hell yeah. i feel like the netherlands probably did this a while ago, and it makes sense. work is work. laborers should be given the same rights across the board, no matter what their industry is.
 
"The new law also establishes fundamental rights for sex workers including the right to refuse clients, choose their practices and stop an act at any moment."

OK, perfectly fine... if they are then required to give the guy his money back, but I bet they won't be.
 
Based, hopefully it helps keep them safer.

It's legal to film sex and make money off it, to rub one's naked body on someone for cash, but not for the doing it without a camera?

I feel like there's a middle man joke
 
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Based, hopefully it helps keep them safer.

It's legal to film sex and make money off it, to rub one's naked body on someone for cash, but not for the doing it without a camera?

I feel like there's a middle man joke

In Sweden sex work is illegal, yet the IRS want them to pay taxes.
I doubt any of them do pay taxes but still.
 
i read a book recently that showed no benefits to women after making sex work legal. sex trafficking trucked right along and women were still abused nearly as much....

I don't know anything about this specific policy and approach but its not typically the panacea people think it is.

It gets worse. Human trafficking for sex is worse in countries that have legalized prostitution. More demand and women are just as exploitable/vulnerable even with it being legal.
 
sounds like a declaration that “sex workers” in Belgium expect to be paid and not put out[/MEDIA]

if thats how you interpret the 'right to refuse clients', you might be a rapist.
 
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