Session Abstracts


Track C- Art, Entertainment, and Media



Download 374.51 Kb.
Page4/8
Date14.08.2017
Size374.51 Kb.
#31830
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8

Track C- Art, Entertainment, and Media
Wednesday 11:45-12:30 Meeshee: Clicking with your Photographer: Journalizing Your Portfolio & Knowing Your Rights (Cross-listed with Track D)
Track D- Business Development
Wednesday 11:45-12:30 Meeshee: Clicking with your Photographer: Journalizing Your Portfolio & Knowing Your Rights (Cross-listed with Track C)


Defining Your Persona- Persona: a person's perceived or evident personality, personal image or public role. Venezuela boasts the highest number of international beauty awards: five Miss Worlds & four Miss Universes, among dozens of other victories. How do these women do it? A Venezuelan beauty queen isn’t born perfect. She is groomed & cultivated to be her best by attending streams of classes on movement, etiquette, skin care, posing for photographs & more. A photo session begins one week before the actual shoot. The process starts with a phone consultation. The photographer accumulates as much detail as possible. Following the consultation, the photographer designs a story board of sets & themes based upon the client’s wardrobe & objective.

The Contract- The contract is emailed to the client before the phone consultation which the client is expected to review. If she has any questions they should be addressed before the day of the shoot. On the day of the shoot, the photographer & client review the contract with which she is already familiar. She receives an original, signed copy.

The Day of the Shoot- The photographer coaches her client on the best postures even demonstrating movements throughout the shoot. Special attention is paid to wardrobe, accessories, nails, toes & personalized makeup & hair. In short, the photographer & client have now completed the process of analyzing her persona & breaking it down into its most favorable components. Now that her persona has been clearly defined, they are ready to create specific images that talk to the viewer about who she is. There are no boundaries. Journalizing your persona involves accruing a well rounded portfolio of images limited only by your imagination. The first 30 minutes of a photo session is dedicated to warm up. Now, the shoot is ready to begin.

The Photo Session is Not Over…- Selecting final images can be a process with which the client needs assistance & she should not be left hanging. The photo session continues as the photographer & client analyze, discuss & select the best images.

Knowing Your Rights- Who owns the copyright to an image is a highly controversial issue & one that is surrounded by many myths. The U.S. Library of Congress defines copyright quite clearly. The importance is what the copyright assigns. This is where the client & photographer agree to the rights she has to her photos.

Building Success- In order to be successful, a woman whose product is herself must stay at the forefront of her industry, especially now during this challenging economy. The secret to success is threefold: defining, exhibiting & maintaining your persona. This process includes developing a variety of professional photos that scream, ‘wow!’ on a regular basis. Professional images are vital to your success.
Wednesday 12:45-1:30 Sexquire.com: Money, Power, Danger and Deductions – legal and accounting issues for everyone
Do you have a box of receipts that you drag with you at tax time? Have you heard about LLCs or corporations but aren’t sure how they could help you? Would you like to protect your creations but aren’t sure how to make that happen? If you answered yes to any of these questions, this seminar is for you. Many individuals who work alone (as independent contractors working for someone else or true one-person operations) are unaware of the options available to them for incorporating or otherwise formalizing their business. However, it is important to consider all of the legal and tax related issues and hazards before choosing whether to incorporate or form some other entity.  Find out what forming an entity might mean for your tax return, including write-offs and what exactly can be included in business expenses. Also covered will be the unique needs of internet-based businesses, including the absolute necessity of terms of use (the rules of the road for your website), the importance of knowing what sales tax rates may apply to your site and the goods or services sold there, and how to find and secure a credit card processor (besides Paypal). We’ll also cover copyright and trademark issues related to websites, advertising and personal service businesses – i.e. “the world beyond Twitter” and how to protect your business identity online and in print. Finally, we’ll discuss the importance of having some form of accounting system that works for you, and how to use it to figure out what is working for your business. Discussion will include the unique issues facing cash-based businesses, and tips for dealing with the IRS.
Track E- Harm Reduction and Outreach
Wednesday 11:45-12:30 Alexis Roth: Risk Negotiation (Cross-listed with Track A)
Wednesday 11:45-1:30 Sephen Crowe: Men at Work: Building a National Movement of Male Sex Workers?
At the 2008 Desiree Alliance Conference, a panel entitled “Male Sex Workers: How to Organize, Support & Advocate for Ourselves in the Movement” sparked a great deal of interest and dialogue that evolved into a national network/listserve known as MenAtWork. This year, “MenAtWork: Building a National Movement of Male Sex Workers” will continue the dialogue and look at how male-identified sex workers and their allies can build stronger alliances together and within our communities. This roundtable discussion will look at how male sex workers fit into the greater sex worker rights movement, and how male sex workers can better advocate for themselves and their cohort.
Wednesday 12:40-1:30 Sandy Guillaume & Ricardo Canales: Making Connections: Effective Outreach Strategies in the Sex Worker Community
Citiwide Harm Reduction is dedicated to reducing the adverse health, social and economic costs of drugs in New York City. Since 2005, the STREET Program has strived to serve as a bridge for this underserved population and connect them to health care services and other basic needs such as condoms, health literature, and harm reduction tools, while also providing case management and advocacy to the sex workers. This presentation intends to describe the overall effectiveness of coupling programs and research to engage hard to reach individuals such as sex workers. This presentation will also identify the various strategies that the STREET Program utilizes to engage, and serve a hard to reach population and address their needs. In conjunction with a New York City Department of Health/SAMHSA evaluation research study of our program’s impact, we have been able to not only expand our outreach area to other Bronx neighborhoods and the Upper West Side of Harlem, but also offer more harm reduction-based services for sex workers through the provision of incentives for participating in the research. Because of this innovative pairing of research and service provision, we have successfully engaged more female, male, and transgendered sex workers and their partners than would otherwise have been possible, by connecting them to health and supportive services, allowing them to learn their HIV and hepatitis C status and connect to care.
Wednesday 3:00pm to 4:30 Sessions




Track A- Academic and Policy: Examining Criminalization, Legalization, Decriminalization

Wednesday 3:00-3:30 Crystal Jackson & Barb Brents: Nevada’s legal brothels in historical perspective
Nevada’s legal brothel industry can be a contentious topic among sex worker rights advocates. The industry is a highly regulated legalized model. It is based in heteronormative and sexist ideologies (up until this year, only women could work there and men are allowed to work now only under the assumption of female clientele; women’s bodies are tightly controlled). Allegations of labor abuses and overall concerns of splitting with the house are often enough for some rights advocates to brush off the industry as antithetical to the goals of the sex workers’ rights movement.

This presentation is a critical analysis of the history of prostitution in Nevada. How has the legal brothel industry come to be?  Once intertwined with the mining industry, the venues and forms that the sale of sex have taken in Nevada have changed over time, becoming illegal today except in small, rural counties. Understanding the history of Nevada’s brothel industry helps understand how public perception, businesses (like mining and gaming), and rural community intersect. Drawing from over a decade of ethnographic research, and in-depth historical analysis of policy creation, newspaper articles, and reports, we argue that understanding the relationship between prostitution and tourism is central to understanding the current manifestation of the only legal sexual commerce in the United States. The implications of Nevada’s history are relevant for contemporary conversations about the pros and cons of legal v. illegal work, pushes for decriminalization, and the proliferation of sex trafficking discourse.


Wednesday 3:30-4:00 Meredith Ralston: Selling sex: Passionate debates
This paper will summarize the research I have been doing for my next feature-length documentary film that examines the phenomena of SELLING SEX. Why, how, and where do people sell their bodies? And why, how and where do people buy? It’s been called the world’s oldest profession for a reason: since the earliest recorded human history there have been accounts of prostitution – Greek courtesans of 2500 B.C., Chinese concubines in the Ming dynasty, medieval European “harlots” and pre-colonial Asian second wives. Though the common denominator has historically been men’s desire for women’s bodies, equality in the twenty-first century has meant that women are paying for sex, too.

            The debates about prostitution are angry and passionate. The religious right speaks against prostitution for moral reasons – it’s against family values; the feminist left is against it because they claim it’s a form of power, control and violence against women. Libertarians and pro-sex feminists argue in favour of prostitution for reasons of liberty and equality – we should celebrate our sexuality and all forms of it and not be such prudes. How to reconcile these very different points of view is the focus of this research and film. Why do men and women want to buy sex from others? How do we create public policy that will alleviate the violence and health issues of women and men working in the sex industry? How do we differentiate between the choice issues and exploitation of the trafficked teen in Nepal with the independent call girl in Los Angeles? How does the context of prostitution help us decide whether prostitution should be accepted and legalized, de-criminalized or abolished? Should sex workers be regulated, licensed and taxed like any other employee? Are brothels and red light districts the answer to our tough public policy questions?  Selling Sex Globally examines the prostitution industry worldwide, with examples coming from the trafficking of women from Nepal to India, streetwalkers in Halifax, brothel workers in Vancouver and Nevada, and female sex tourists in the Gambia. The hope is that the viewer, regardless of their personal point of view, will come to see why academics and activists advocate for de-criminalization of prostitution – whether just for the women (as in Sweden) or for all involved (as in New Zealand) and how different contexts require very different policy responses.


Wednesday 4:00-4:30 Tamara Larter: More than a “whore:” A discourse analysis of the multiple murders of sex trade workers in Edmonton, Canada, 2001-2008
Over 30 women linked with the sex trade in Edmonton, Canada have gone missing or been murdered in the past 25 years, with nineteen of these occurring since the year 2001. In this study, I focus on the ways that Edmonton’s local newspapers speak about, and (re)present these murders so as to unpack social values and practices relating to sexuality, race, gender, and power. Drawing on Foucauldian and feminist standpoint theories, I argue that as newspapers report on the murders and disappearances of sex trade workers, they are able to influence and shape the public’s (mis)understanding of the situation, and, in turn, are shaped by already established social norms. My research findings show that the way local newspapers speak about, and (re)present the murders of sex trade workers operates to deviantize these women, thereby minimizing the tragedy of their disappearances and deaths. I argue that this deviantization is achieved in a combination of three ways; by framing sex trade workers as criminally, medically, and morally deviant. Discourses of criminal deviance place sex trade workers firmly on the ‘wrong’ side of the law, therefore making them undeserving of police protection; medical deviance implies that only women who are mentally ill in some way would take part in the sex trade, and, simultaneously, hyperbolizes the role of sex workers in the spread of sexually transmitted diseases. Finally, discourses of moral deviance place sex workers on the ‘wrong’ side of morality and femininity, particularly in terms of dichotomies such as good/bad, pure/impure, clean/dirty, and virgin/whore.

Print media, specifically Edmonton-based newspapers, the Edmonton Sun and the Edmonton Journal, are my focus for this discourse-based investigation. I also look to alternative discourses, such as those presented by sex worker organizations and advocacy groups, to better understand the contested nature of such ‘knowledge’. By drawing on multiple discursive venues, I find that while much of the newspaper content works to dehumanize sex trade workers, there is also a discursive attempt to rehumanize the murdered women through the voices of family, friends, and advocates.


Track B- Activism
Wednesday 3:00-3:40 Kigongo Ali: Sex Work, Religion and Activism
Activism begins at infancy or is sparked off by a certain incident that touches the activist’s heart. When I witness activists cry during conferences, workshops and other conventions, my heart immediately begins pounding, asking my brains what history is behind this crying, what sufferings were encountered by the activist and when. I keep asking myself if it is worth the activism within the person crying, and whether it carries more weight than what I experienced. Knowing each other’s activism history creates harmony, and harmony creates strong networks which produce successes. Activism is not about speaking well, it begins right from the bottom of the sea, if people were a sea. In this case activism begins from the bottom of your heart, only then can Human rights Activists withstand all conditions that make them vulnerable to torture and religious fundermentalism. Unlike other religions, Islam in Uganda has proved to be fatal against ‘sexworkers human rights’ activism. Within the Ahadith and Qur-an, it is not permissible to indulge in adultery but again the Qur-an gives broad independence to everyone. For example; it forbids attacking those who have not attacked you, and various verses have called on to the prophet to avail people with rights to believe in their chosen paths.
Track C- Art, Entertainment, and Media
Wednesday 3:00-4:30 Anna Saini, Surgeon, and Mariko Passion: Using Art to Survive and Transgress Violence  (Cross-listed with Track E)
On December 17th 2009, SWOP-Arizona members used art and performance to commemorate the death of Marcia Powell who was serving a 27month sentence for prostitution. She was killed by the prison industrial complex, dying of heat related complications in an outdoor cell in Goodyear, Arizona. Surgeon will present word and images of SWOP-AZ memorial and talk about how their chapter used art to transgress violence. The second part of the session we will share examples where we reclaim spaces of violence - geographical, print, experiential and otherwise - and collectively transform these instances through creative expression. Let's share methods of using artistic voice to heal, engage in knowledge production and create beauty. Together we will leave the session with concrete ideas of how to translate the endemic violence in our community into artistic productivity and empowerment.
Track D- Business Development
Wednesday 3:00-3:40 Doug Bynon: A Tax Workshop for the Cash-Based Professional
Do you think the IRS doesn’t know about you? If you don’t declare your income, it’s a crime. Deductions are a difference of opinion. Mainstream your financial life without exposing yourself to the risks of a close look by the IRS. Minimize your tax risk, maximize your financial future through sound tax strategies. Structure your business and personal financial situation with sound and proven analysis. In this informative and comfortable workshop, you will learn what works and what doesn’t when it comes to taxes and cash flow. Evaluate your tax profile and where to place yourself to balance things so you are not constantly looking over your shoulder, worrying about this aspect of your business life. Find out what to do if you have heard from the IRS, or maybe worse, haven’t heard from them. Learn how to use an advisor to your advantage and negotiate on your behalf through communication with the right people in the tax system. Don’t wait for an IRS intervention.
Wednesday 3:00-3:30
Wednesday 3:50-4:30 Lusty Day: Working it Down Under: How to Escort Successfully in Australia
Interested in working and holidaying in Australia? In some parts of Australia, sex work is decriminalized. Come to this workshop to learn from a fellow traveler how to take advantage of the rare opportunity to escort legally and safely in this beautiful and friendly country. Topics include: how to apply for visas to Australia; best practice tips for maximizing your fun and funds in brothels, including how to score clients, charge for extras, and keep drama to a minimum; how to work within the law; how to access health care for sex workers; managing and moving your income between countries, including income tax restrictions; advertising guidelines in print and online publications; analysis of racism and transphobia in the Australian sex industry and what it means for your business; negotiating big-money clients; how to turn your perhaps ordinary accent into $$$; introduction to Australian sex worker organizations and cultural groups; doing self-care and dealing with homesickness when traveling especially while working in the industry. While the workshop will focus on full service work in brothels as well as independent GFE escorting, we will also discuss working in peep shows and massage parlours. Your questions and experience welcome!
Wednesday 3:50-4:30 Allen Lichtenstein: Basic Issues in Contract Law for Sex Workers
Most people involved in various types of sex work will, at some point in their careers, be asked to sign some sort of contract. For people who are unfamiliar with the often arcane, misleading and confusing language of these contracts, there is the reasonable fear of inadvertently agreeing to something detrimental to the signer’s interest, or some provision that is unenforceable as a matter of law. While this is true of any type of contract, sex work raises some particularly difficult issues. While the best policy is clearly not to sign any contract without first contacting your own attorney. this presentation will look at certain types of contracts involved in sex work from photographic models to master/slave contracts, in order to point out certain “red flags” to look for.
Track E- Harm Reduction and Outreach
Wednesday 3:00-4:30 Anna Saini, Surgeon, and Mariko Passion: Using Art to Survive and Transgress Violence (Cross-listed with Track C)
Wednesday 3:30-4:00 Jill McCracken: One Outreach/Harm Reduction Program and Its Impact on Street Sex Workers
This presentation aims to both critique and offer suggestions for best practices of harm reduction and outreach services based on an in-depth analysis of one organization. Because this presentation is based on research that involved interviews with people that participate in illegal behavior, the Institutional Review Board requires that my research site not be identified. It is therefore necessary that I not reveal the name of this organization as well. My hope is that some of these organization’s practices, as well as my analysis, critiques, and suggestions regarding outreach and harm reduction, can be applied to others’ experiences and organizations as well.

This outreach organization spanned an interesting crossroads that was grounded in social service agents, law enforcement, and neighborhood association leaders. As someone who inhabited the roles of volunteer, employee, and researcher during the thirty months I worked on my academic research, I gained valuable insight based on multiple perspectives and discussion about this organization, their mission, their goals, and their day-to-day practices. In addition to my own experiences, I also draw from approximately twenty interviews with street workers as well as a total of twenty interviews with social service agents, police officers, activists, and neighborhood association leaders. My research is based on an ethnographic, interview study grounded in rhetorical analysis of the language used by my participants in order to offer suggestions for how this language influences perspectives about street sex work and street sex workers.

This presentation focuses on best practices of outreach and harm reduction based on the perspectives of those who were closest to the program: 1) my interviews with social service agents who worked at this organization; 2) my interviews with police officers and neighborhood association leaders about street sex work and this organization, 3) my interviews with street workers about their experiences with this organization, and 4) my own experience volunteering and working with, as well as researching, this organization. I then offer suggestions for how outreach programs such as this one might better understand and reach their intended audience, as well as integrate their clients (street workers) and their clients’ expertise into their outreach and harm reduction practices.
Wednesday 4:00-4:30 Greg Scott & Erin Scott: Rediscovering and Reporting the 'Badness" of Violence: Lessons Learned from a Grassroots Attempt to Create a "Bad Date List' Program for Street Level Women Sex Workers
In the course of providing harm reduction outreach services (e.g., sterile syringe exchange, HIV-STD testing and counseling, condom distribution, etc.), the Chicago Recovery Alliance (CRA) recognized the overwhelming incidence of victimization—particularly violence, psychological/emotional abuse, and financial injury—among street-level (i.e., “open circuit”) sex workers. In an effort to reduce these instances of victimization and thereby assist sex working participants in achieving “any positive change” as defined on their own terms, the presenters worked with CRA staff and the most affected participants to establish a “Bad Dates List” program.

The BDL operates in conjunction with CRA's mobile outreach sites and serves as an “information hub” for women performing “open circuit” sex work (primarily on the streets, “in the public way,” and in short-term occupancy motels). Each week women who have experienced some form of harm while plying their trade report their encounters to BDL staff, who reduce the accounts to brief typed reports which they later compile in a digest and circulate throughout the community on a weekly basis (titled “Community Alert”). Ideally, women performing sex work in the area then read the weekly digests and assimilate the information into their daily work lives as they continually attempt to determine the relative safety of each prospective sex transaction.

In its 18-month existence the BDL has waxed and waned. Early on, volunteers came to appreciate one of the central obstacles to success: The relative normalization (structural, organizational, and psychological) of street violence among sex workers combines with the exigencies of drug addiction to produce a high level inertia among the women who ostensibly would benefit the most from the program. Upon realizing the difficulty of attracting women to the outreach location, BDL volunteers had to craft inventive methods for “incentivizing” women's participation in the program. In short, the problems with the BDL lay not in convincing women to submit their reports of “bad dates,” but rather in helping victimized women to see their injuries as legitimate and “report-worthy” and also in simply drawing them to the program site where they can give their reports.

Various attempts to “publicize” the BDL and increase participation in it have achieved varying degrees of success. In this presentation we focus on some of the key lessons learned from the BDL program in general and more specifically from the latest BDL-enhancement initiative, the now one-year-old clothing and cosmetics exchange called RECOVERY RAGS (RR).

RR's participants are often not only dealing with the common risk-factors associated with sex work but are also facing problems surrounding substance dependence/addiction and homelessness. The “life structure” of many participants demanded that Recovery Rags develop new methods for program delivery. Many of the participants rarely enjoy reliable access to proper shelter, clothing, and other basic necessities, much less the capacity to access or pay for medical care, legal services, or other forms of assistance. In response to the expressed “needs and wants” of participants, Recovery Rags distributes gently used clothing and new toiletries/make-up to any woman who comes to CRA's outreach site. Although the going has been slow, we have compelling evidence that this approach is increasing the level of participation in the BDL. At the same time, however, we also have found that there are many more needs that neither this program nor any other single program can meet. In short, we have found that satisfying some of the immediate yet seemingly “superficial” wants and needs (e.g., cosmetics, nicer clothing, skin care products, etc.) of women sex workers is essential to the successful implementation of a program designed to achieve much more critical goals, in this case the preservation of health, wellbeing, and in some cases life itself.
Wednesday 5:00pm to 6:30pm Sessions
Track A- Academic and Policy: The Value of Sex Work
Wednesday 5:00-6:30 Megan Morgenson: The Value of Sex Work (Cross-listed with Track D)
A presentation including a brief historical perspective of sex work throughout history, leading up to current thoughts about what value sex work has in current society from financial, emotional, psychological and physical perspectives.  I will include my own perspective as a sex worker for over 15 years as well as insights from others that have corresponded with me privately about their own ideas of where they find value in sex work.  In an attempt to show an understanding of the full spectrum of experiences, a small section will also be included on the arguments made against sex work having any value in society, and in some instances, arguments may be presented to refute some of those claims when appropriate.
Track B- Activism
Wednesday 5:00-6:30 Scarlett Lake: Film- "A Safer Sex Trade" with Q&A
A Safer Sex Trade is a documentary that explores the stigma of prostitution through the eyes of three women: a former survival sex worker, a highly paid escort and an established Madam. They share their experiences while working in the City of Vancouver, where Robert Pickton stands trial for the alleged murder of 26 women, most of whom were working in the sex trade.

Scarlett is a highly successful madam with 30 years experience in the sex trade business; Simone is a high-class sex worker who services wealthy clients in five Western Canadian cities; and Jennifer is a former drug addicted prostitute who now works tirelessly to offer support to sex trade workers on the streets. These women have had different experiences in the sex trade business, but they're united by one concern-the safety of women in their stigmatized industry.

The documentary premiered at the Whistler Film Festival and has since been purchased by every major institution of higher learning, across Canada, for their libraries.

Production was completed in November of 2006 and the film enjoyed its world premiere to a packed theatre at the Whistler International Film Festival December 2nd. The documentary had its world television premiere on CBC Newsworld’s, The Lens, on January 23, 2007. Since then the film has been purchased by every major Canadian institution of higher learning for their libraries.

A Safer Sex Trade is an original concept created by Carolyn Allain and co-written with David Ray, produced by their independent film company Cheap and Dirty Productions. 

Scarlett Lake will show a portion of the film and be available for discussion.


Track C- Art, Entertainment, and Media
Wednesday 5:00-6:30 Solo Performances Day 1
Track D- Business Development
Wednesday 5:00-6:30 Karrie, Marcus, Riley Nicole, Crysta Heart, Skytrinia Berkeley, Scarlet, and Erika: Developing a screening policy that works for you; keeping you safe and ensuring your success! (Cross-listed with Track E)
This panel will discuss a variety of steps for developing a screening policy specifically designed for your business. By asking yourself what kind of clients you want you will be guided to write a "script" that will gather information about your clients and can be used for screening, assessing if they're the right fit as well as info on how effective your marketing is. By identifying your market and understanding your client you will be better able to build a practice that you feel good about, that attracts the kind of clients you want to work with and will help you build a safe and sustainable business.
Wednesday 5:00-6:30 Megan Morgenson: The Value of Sex Work (Cross-listed with Track A)
Track E- Harm Reduction and Outreach
Wednesday 5:00-5:30 Screening Panel (Cross-listed with Track D)
Wednesday 5:00-6:30 Juliet November and Lisa Marie Alatorre: Skill Share on community accountability /healing /transformational approaches to violence against sex workers
Come together to talk in a radically different way about how we can stop, prevent and heal from violence against us without relying on cops or prisons. The criminal legal system has never shown itself to be a friend to sex workers, especially more marginalized workers (like the poor, those of colour, trans women, migrants, youth). So how can we find ways to deal with violence ourselves? In this skill share I'm proposing we understand violence widely--that it's not just about physical violence and it's not just about clients--but that we look at the spectrum of violence we face: like domestic violence with our partners, social, spiritual, emotional and cultural violence of whore-hatred and state violence like arrest and incarceration--and the intimate ways these intersect with other oppressions. This is a skill share not a workshop because I am not interested in "teaching" so much as sharing the fierce wisdom of whores about healing, transformation, resilience and prevention.
Thursday, July 29th 2010
10:15am to 10:40am Breakfast Keynote: Robyn Few
Thursday 11:45 to 1:30 Sessions
Track A- Academic and Policy: Teaching Reform and Best Practices
Thursday 11:45-12:20 Laura Kane and Adrienne Telford: An exercise in hypocrisy: Prostitution Laws in the Canadian Context
This paper hopes to provoke and incite a questioning of existing models of civic responsibility and justice that underlie anti-sex and misogynist policies. We aim to do this by providing a deconstruction of the notion of human rights and an analysis of who is included in the discourse on rights. For example, if rights are fundamentally exclusive, then it is critical that spaces of struggle must be fought for in order to maintain a porous border between grassroots struggles and the institutionalization of said struggles. Our paper argues that social justice groups like Maggie’s and Sex Professionals of Canada (SPOC), offer alternate standards of justice which can assist policy groups to be more inclusive of the specific struggles and realities of sex workers.

Relative to the United States, Canada is considered a sexually open country. But a closer look at its laws reveals a framework that is arguably hypocritical. This paper explores aspects of the Criminal Code (especially the prohibitions under section 212 on living under the avails and section 210 on bawdy houses) and discusses how de-criminalization can help to overcome problems within policies that marginalize and make precarious the work of sex professionals. Referring to the constitutional challenge taking place in Vancouver, attorney Katrina Pace states that “What the case is actually about in the long-term is the way that criminal laws that relate to adult prostitution violate the safety, and the liberty and the equality of sex trade workers.” Citing the democratic vision, Pace makes clear that the law does not in all cases protect the interests of all members of society, thus shattering any claim that we live in an equal society. If what is at stake, following Pace, is the protection, freedom and equality of marginalized workers, then how does de-criminalization support these goals? The paper explores some of the issues­ surrounding de-criminalization, making a distinction between real and perceived threats, arguing that the latter must be challenged in order to recognize the autonomy of sex workers.


Thursday 12:25-1:00 Tracey Sagar: Back to basics? Sex workers’ civil liberties and human rights and the importance of a ‘principled’ framework in the development of criminal law
This paper focuses on legal measures contained in Part 2 of the Policing and Crime Act 2009 which came into force on 1st April 2010 in England and Wales.   The measures aim to: rehabilitate sex workers, facilitate the prosecution of kerb crawlers; reduce the demand for sex work and trafficking. With regard to this latter aim, specific attention is paid to the introduction of a new strict liability offence ‘paying for sexual services of a prostitute who has been subject to exploitative conduct of a kind likely to induce or encourage the provision of sexual services for which the payer has made or promised payment’. The paper discusses the provisions in the context of the ongoing and increasing curtailment of civil and human rights for sex workers and their clients in the UK. It argues that, in the face of political indifference, there is a need to return to a more principled legal framework when developing criminal law. Furthermore, that it is essential researchers continue to challenge laws which abandon criminal law protections and which deny individuals basic Human Rights; the need for empirical verification is essential to any such challenge. Thus, importantly, this paper promotes the furtherance of a responsible research agenda where researchers and sex workers continue to challenge the role of legislation whilst remaining firmly committed to securing rights and liberties for sex workers.
Thursday 1:00-1:30 Vegan Vixen: Sex work, classrooms, and Text books: Teaching about Sex Work in Academia  (Cross-listed with Track B)
Having experience as a student and sex worker, Vegan Vixen has been very conscious of how sex work is portrayed in the classroom and in textbooks.  Though she has noticed some open-mindedness, she also has concerns about sex work being taught and discussed in a very shallow way that does not dig beyond the surface or address how public policies affect sex workers.  At times, she has felt silenced and unable to speak out about sex work in the classroom due to such adverse attitudes that are based largely on misperceptions and jumping to conclusions.  Rather than pathologizing the whole field or promoting an overly romanticized view of sex work,  this presentation will address skills for teaching about sex work in a holistic way that addresses the multiple realities that exist in this field, and how to teach about sex work on a deep level, rather than relying mainly on stereotypes and overgeneralizations. 

The presentation will address innovative techniques for teaching about sex work in academia, including class and small group discussions; educational videos and DVD’s; selection reading materials;  art; lectures; responding to challenging questions and stereotypical comments about sex work;  and community building with groups inside and outside of academia.  Vegan Vixen believes that a major purpose of education must be to expand our minds, and the way people teach and learn about sex work plays an important role in this.  Many sex workers are also students, and it is important that academia provide a welcoming environment rather than a hostile one for sex workers.  Educators and students play an important role in making this a reality.


Track B- Activism
Thursday 11:45-1:15 HOOK Collective: Community Caucus Series – Connecting the Dots:  exploring the impacts of race, class, and privilege on the current state of the sex worker movement
Currently, the identity of “sex worker activist” is a label that largely brings to mind images of the empowered, white, privileged, indoor sex worker. While these images do serve to promote a greater awareness of “sex work” as a positive, empowering choice in contrast to the stigmas seen predominantly in mainstream society, the fact is that individuals who work in the sex industry span the broad spectrum of race, class, gender, sexuality, ability, bodies, privilege, and experience - and these complexities often get pushed to the wayside amidst the urgent activism of simply pushing forth the most basic rights for sex workers in the public eye.

This caucus series, led by community members and activists from various backgrounds, attempts to create safe spaces for sex workers from all walks of life to more deeply explore the ways in which sex worker activism has been influenced - and divided by - race, class, and experience, and strategize about how we can develop more solid, diverse foundations of mindful, inclusive community support and accountability in relation to our own positions of privilege and poverty in the world at large.

A brief survey will be distributed in days preceding the caucus to give conference/caucus attendees the chance to voice their opinions on what issues they would like to see addressed during this caucus. Based on the information gathered from these surveys, the caucus facilitators will have a better understanding on how to guide the caucus discussions.

There will be two caucuses happening simultaneously – a People Of Color Caucus, and a White People’s Caucus. In these 2 break-out caucuses, individuals will have the chance to dialogue about things such as: their experiences in sex work, political work, working/volunteering with organizations or non-profits, work that exists alongside or in collaboration with individuals, groups and/or orgs, and more. What has worked for you? What obstacles have you encountered? What changes would you like to see in the sex worker activist movement? How have issues of race, class, and privilege influenced your personal, political, and work lives, and how have you addressed it? Do you even identify as a sex worker?

Following the break-out caucuses, the two groups will convene together to report back and dialogue about the issues that were raised in the break-outs. Facilitated within a healing framework of anti-oppression principles, this Community Caucus hopes to build greater connections and understanding between individuals from varying experiences and backgrounds.

In sharing our experiences, successes, failures, frustrations, strategies, and desires for progress, we hope to create a safe, supportive, healing space where sex workers and sex worker activists can begin talking more seriously as a community about how these complexities influence the current state of the sex worker movement, and how we can effectively build the bridges necessary to create a sex worker (activist) community that is more inclusive, inviting, and accessible to sex workers from a diverse range of backgrounds.


Thursday 1:00-1:30 Vegan Vixen: Sex work, classrooms, and Text books (Cross-listed with Track A)
Track C- Art, Entertainment, and Media
Thursday 11:45-1:30 Taking Your Sex Worker Art on the Road and to the Next Level with Cameryn Moore, Laurenn McCubbin, Kirk Read and Mariko Passion
Track D- Business Development
Thursday 11:45-12:45 Serpent and BeBeDoll: The Ethical Sex Worker  (Cross-listed with Track E)

As sex workers, part of what drives us in this industry is being able to create a sex worker identity that best reflects our personalities, likes, and dislikes and helps us create a lifestyle which helps us find peace within ourselves. Whether it be our interpersonal relationships with clients or other workers, being an ethical sex worker means creating and cultivating a positive experience for ourselves, our clients, and those in our communities. While many of us keep separate sex worker "identities," what we should be doing is a reflection of what we ourselves actually enjoy in order to find comfort within our work and our community. Sex workers need to discover what draws them to this type of work and how our attitudes and behavior while we are in it reflects upon the industry as a whole. Based on the above, we intend to create a loose discussion about identity and other ethical issues around sex work. This presentation will be conducted in a roundtable format, and participation is encouraged by all attendees.


Thursday 12:40-1:30 Sinnamon Love: Parenting and Sex Work: Balancing Life, Family and Work (Cross-listed with Track E)
This workshop is intended to assist active sex workers in maintaining the duality of their work and home lives. There is very little research on children of sex workers in developed countries outside of street-walkers or brothel workers in the under-developed countries of India and Bangledesh. As many women in developed countries enter the sex industry voluntarily, there is a need to create a dialogue in order to discuss parenting techniques, special needs or requirements in regards to child care, education and health care in order to effectively parent and work in their chosen field.

As many women who enter the sex industry may not have solid familial ties, it becomes imperative that an effective support system be set up to provide for their children. Including education, after school or night-time care while the sex worker parent is working. It is important to teach the sex worker parent how to contend with a co-parent that may not agree with the sex workers chosen profession or fighting with government run children’s services that might try remove the children from the home in areas where some forms of sex work might be legal yet a morally questionable occupation. Also covered are work proofing your home and explaining sex work as occupation in age appropriate terminology.

The session will include a formal presentation to ensure adequate basic information, self-assessment activities to guide learners in reflection and small group interactive tasks to build understanding and skills.
Thursday 12:50-1:30 Jean Gray: Energetic Protection and Cleansing for Sex Workers
Sex workers, whether acknowledging this or not, conduct work of an intensely spiritual nature. Our energies and our auras are constantly being touched, played and collided with. With these constant interactions we are sometimes left with energetic residue. Many sex workers that continually suffer from stagnant or negative thoughts and anxiety may be able to follow this back to the subtle energy. Energies, negative or not, periodically attach themselves to the subtle body; consequently, individuals who work intimately with these energies must keep a strong practice of shielding and cleansing in order to thrive.   Taking exercises and small rituals that body workers, spirit workers, and healers have used for centuries to ensure their own energetic health and the health of their clients, you’ll see how they can be used and adapted to counter the challenges of intimate exchanges involved in all forms of sex work. This workshop will cover basics of energetic protection and renewal such as grounding and shielding, as well as a few solutions to shed yourself of excess energies. As sex workers, we don’t have to accept that we are constantly operating on low levels of energy because our clients and coworkers drain us.  With self awareness, and a few tools, we can ensure that we are as well taken care of spiritually as our clients are physically.
Track E- Harm Reduction and Outreach
Thursday 11:45-12:45 Serpent Libertine and BeBeDoll: The Ethical Sex Worker (Cross-listed with Track D)
Thursday 12:40-1:30 Sinnamon Love: Parenting and Sex Work: Balancing Life, Family and Work (Cross-listed with Track D)
Thursday 1:45 Lunch Keynote: Nina Hartley
Thursday 3:00pm to 4:30pm Sessions
Track A- Academic and Policy: Sex Work Shaken and Stirred
Thursday 3:30-3:50 Crystal Jackson and Elizabeth Nanas: Academic Roundtable Wrap-up
As scholars, we engage in critical research that can help inform and influence public policy and public opinion. This scholarship is complicated by political, economic, and social positions of researcher and subject. Power and influence are critical concerns to both scholars and sex workers. Furthermore, scholars have specific material concerns regarding the ways that we may or may not be supported as scholar-activists especially where tenure concerns arise. Another practical problem emerges where scholars who are “outsiders” desire to be sex worker rights allies.

With these concerns in mind, we offer introductory and post-conference roundtables. These roundtables will specifically focus on questions such as: What does an academic ally look like? How can we best engage in an activist movement respectfully, thoughtfully, and with an eye toward social change? How has our research impacted policies at local, state, or national levels? How can we best engage in social justice oriented research? How can we help activist movements strategize and move forward?

The goals of this workshop are to:

1.      Discuss what it means to be an academic ally for a rights movement

2.      Educate each other on the use of research as a tool for social justice

3.      Name concrete ways our research can assist the sex workers’ rights movement

We strongly encourage all academic presenters to attend this workshop and to bring your questions, concerns, and ideas to the table.  We understand that some of us have a long history of activism and others are new to it. This roundtable is open to all scholars and researchers attending this activist conference.
Thursday 3:55-4:30 Carol Leigh: Sex Worker Media Library (Cross-listed with Track B and C)
Sex Worker artist Carol Leigh (AKA Scarlot Harlot) and the Center for Sex & Culture (CSC) are the new home of the CSC Sex Worker Media Library. Created with the goal of preserving sex worker culture and discourse, funded by a grant from the Creative Work Fund, the library features a pathfinder-based delivery system of digital materials documenting the stories, artistic expressions, history, and legal and social positions of sex workers internationally. The library is located on-site at CSC and available for viewing by application only. Project director Carol Leigh explains, "This resource is designed to assist researchers, scholars and activists (including sex workers, of course) in their efforts to understand and support sex workers rights and culture. This resource is sorely needed as we survive in a world of stigma, discrimination and criminalization."
Library categories include: art and performance documentation; political demonstrations, marches and street theater; festival films by and about sex workers; interviews/oral histories of sex workers and allies; and documentation from conferences around the world.
Track B- Activism
Thursday 3:00-3:40 HOOK Collective: Yet To Be Named- a zine completely created by participants at this conference!  (Cross-listed with Track C)
In conjunction, and following the Community Caucus, we will have a Writing Workshop where time will be allocated for individuals to be given the chance to write and submit to ____. ___ is a zine that will be compiled, copied, and distributed completely at the conference.

___ will be a political, creative forum where people can share their stories, experiences, ideas, politics, rants, raves, ads, artwork, erotica, etc. Be sexy, be silly, or be pissed - just let it be real! This zine especially encourages those who may be on the margins of the sex worker community to speak out and share their unique experiences! You can choose to remain anonymous. ____will be a parting gift to conference attendees to take home and peruse, ruminate, and share with others at their own pace, on their own time. It is our hope that digital version will be available online to view and print as well, sometime after the conference.

The idea of ___ is to give sex workers the space and time to have our own voices be heard, and also to take home tales of a variety of other community experiences that we may not always have access to, or understanding of. Because the sex worker community is diverse and many – to the extent of where some who engage in “sex work” may not even identify themselves with the sex worker community - it is our hope that this zine will inspire new dialogue, build stronger bridges, and expand the understanding, and connections of ourselves to each other, all fighting for survival, safety, and support within the sex industry!

A call-out for submissions and zine-making participation will be announced both before the conference, and at the beginning of the conference. Individuals can write something fresh at the conference, or bring a prepared, printed work to submit. Submissions must be turned in hard copy form, sized to fit on a 8”x5.75” or 8”x11” page. Deadline is 5pm on July 28.


Thursday 3:55-4:30 Carol Leigh : Sex Worker Media Library (Cross-listed with Track A and C)
Thursday 3:55-4:30 Jessica Yee: Indigenous Sex Work, Realities, and Rights (Cross-listed with Track E)

This highly interactive session will talk frankly about the history of Indigenous rights as they pertain to sexuality and sex work and their exclusion from the mainstream sex work rights movement. Case studies discussing the realities of Indigenous sex workers across the United States and Canada from current projects and initiatives will be shared from the perspective of a young Indigenous sex worker, who is also the founder and Executive Director of the only Indigenous organization working in the full spectrum of sexual and reproductive health across North America that isn't solely disease-control focused and refuses to just put a feather on something and call it "Aboriginal"; the Native Youth Sexual Health Network.


Track C- Art, Entertainment, and Media
Thursday 3:00-3:20 Jenny Price: Documenting contemporary sex work and culture
Documenting contemporary sex work and culture is a critical part of maintaining our society’s history. This photographic essay portrays the lifestyles of sex workers – people who shape the industry. I am interested in educating others on the significance of sex work in this industry by examining the complexity of human nature, desires, and the importance of sexualized identities in our society today. My goal is to share individual’s story from their perspective. Trust and respect is very much part of my creative process and shaping the work in a honest yet visually compelling light. This is a work-in-progress, as I am looking to photograph notions that contribute to the vibrancy and complexity of this profession. Each person involved will preserve for future generations the essence of early 21st century sex work.
Thursday 3:00-3:40 HOOK Collective: Yet To Be Named (Cross-listed with Track B)
Thursday 3:20-3:30 Modern Hooker Comic Strips
Thursday 3:30-3:50 Laurenn McCubbin: Speaking to Las Vegas in the Language of Las Vegas
Thursday 3:55-4:30 Carol Leigh: Sex worker Media Library (Cross-listed with Track A and B)
Thursday 4:10-4:30 Juba Kalamka
Track D- Business Development
Thursday 3:00-3:40 Liz and Telvi Roundtable: Your Girlfriend SUCKS! ...for Money!
Telvi and Liz have been in a committed lesbian relationship for over eight years.  While Liz is an out sex worker and a sex worker activist Telvi has a more main stream job. In this roundtable discussion the trials and tribulations of dating a sex worker as well as being a sex worker in a relationship will be explored. They will be sharing skills that have worked for them concerning but not limited to jealousy, compromise, understanding each other’s needs, communication, as well as respecting each other’s limits and more. Telvi will speak of issues surrounding dating a sex worker and the stigma attached to it. Liz will speak of the struggles of balancing work and personal intimacy as well as the challenge of living in the LGBT community and being straight for pay. This roundtable encourages not only other sex workers with partners but also those who believe that sex work and personal relationship are not compatible.
Thursday 3:50-4:30 Tracy Elise: Tantra & The Goddess:  The Sex Church in the 21st Century
Can you imagine a church where nudity, free sexual expression and true personal power are celebrated? The ancient religions of Tantra and Goddess worship rapidly expanding throughout the our country and the world. The United States was founded by those who sought genuine religious freedom and true separation of church and state.  Imagine and grab onto the power promised by Tom, Ben and George, and discover the ancient religions of Tantra and Goddess (body) worship. If you are not clear about how sex and religion can be practiced at the same time, join Tracy and practitioners of the temples in how sexual energy can transform your life!

How useful would it be to explain Tantra in just one short conversation and demonstration? How do you get to 'union' without getting too religious, abstract or ‘spiritual’? This modality is a wonderful exoteric teaching to help bridge your students to the esoteric inner-work that occurs in private chambers. Magnetic Tantra is a Gateway modality, and can be felt with or without clothing on, so be ready to play together and feel the power of your own magnetic powers with another person. These same techniques were used to integrate successfully with the Seattle, Scottsdale and Phoenix police departments as well as the FBI and IRS. You don't want to miss the fundamentals of safe sex work from a woman who has helped hundreds of sensual body workers, escorts, and dancers transition to a life as a sacred intimate. Finally, give your gifts without fear; bring your practice into total security and celebration. The Temples are hosting impromptu talks and demonstrations at our table during the event, visit us during the Desiree Alliance OR call / write when the festivities expire.  Namaste' (the divine light in me recognizes the divine light in you). 

School of 1 Admissions:  602.956.0651 ask for Wayne
Mystic Sisters Ordination: 480.772.6577 ask for Freya
Track E- Harm Reduction and Outreach
Thursday 3:30-4:00 Claire Kitui: Nature of Sex Work (Past and Present), Reasons for the Increase, Problems Faced in Sex Work, Sex Work and the Law and Conclusion
Sex work is illegal in Uganda but studies have revealed wide prevalence of the practice in different parts of the country especially in urban and semi urban centres. Sex work was mostly wide spread only in Kampala currently accounting for 50% but has now spread to many other towns. Most sex workes are aged between 15-24 years. Children who are below 18 years account for 24% of sex workers leading to a conclusion that the youth are the ones mostly involved in sex work. Many are uneducated, though there is evidence of University students who meet their costs of study by working as sex workers. The transnational networks or traffickers and pimps prey on women seeking employment and opportunities leading them into sex work. Cases of trafficking of sex workers exist mainly on the Islands of Lake Victoria and there are currently no laws or policies that address this issue.

Sex work is mostly associated with women and it takes the form of street walkers, housewives making money from sex work, “Flying sex workers “working in different locations and migrant sex workers from Congo, Rwanda and Burundi and HIV infected sex workers.

There is high use of drugs among sex workers which drugs mainly include Alcohol, marijuana and cocaine.

The growth of sex work has been blamed on the economic situation, domestic violence and deteriorated traditional values. Sex work has been perceived to pose a threat to cultural values by the government, religious leaders and other activists. It is also associated with the spread of HIV AND STIs.

The women’s movement had for a long time refused to incorporate sex workers into their own programs but because of our continued dialogue and lobbying, sex workers programs were finally recognized and today many women activists are now defending the rights of sex workers.

Reaching out to serve sex workers has not been effective as they live in fear of being arrested. Aside that, they are vulnerable to diseases, human sacrifice, rape by both clients and the police, refusal of clients to pay the agreed money, refusal to wear condoms, drugging by clients, one client becoming many, and stigmatization by health workers among others.

There is no clear law to criminalize sex work; however they are continually detained under the “Idle and Disorderly” penal code. A new bill has recently been drafted which criminalizes sex workers as the main spreaders of HIV/AIDS. It clearly states that once a sex worker is proven guilty as charged, they will be jailed for 3-5 years. Another extraordinary charge leveled against sex workers is that of “Disturbing peace by using violent or scurrilous or abusive terms of reproach.”

With all these the patriarchal state attempts to control promiscuous women and their “deviant” sexual acts. It all zeros down to the seller of sex (majority of women) and not to the clients (mainly men). I stand here before you today, calling on each one of you to join our efforts to fight against this discrimination believing that there is power in powers and there are no BAD WOMEN, JUST BAD LAWS.


Thursday 3:30-4:00 Bradley Hart (HookerBoyHealth.com): It’s a (Gay) Guy Thing; Queer Male Perspectives on Sex Work
This panel discussion will focus on the experiences and perspectives of gay/bi men in sex work, including how more male sex workers might be engaged in the movement for sex worker rights, and how achieve better inclusion of the concerns of queer male sex workers in the discourse around gay men’s health.
Thursday 3:55-4:30 Jessica Yee: Indigenous Sex Work, Realities, and Rights (Cross-listed with Track E)
Thursday 4:00-4:30 Streetwise & Safe: Show Some SAS! A “know your rights” video by and for LGBTQ youth of color who have experienced quality of life policing and policing of sex work
Streetwise & Safe (SAS) is a multi-pronged youth leadership development and organizing initiative involving LGBT youth of color with life experience trading sex for money, housing, shelter, food, drugs, immigration status or other survival needs in New York City. In this workshop, we would share the unique curriculum and "know your rights" materials we have shared and developed with SAS participants, which are specific to experiences with policing of sex work and "quality of life" policing. We will also discuss peer education and harm reduction strategies relating to gender and sexuality specific forms and contexts of police misconduct and abuse, and brainstorm possibilities for nationally coordinated locally-based advocacy around policing policies and practices which adversely impact queer youth in the sex trades.
Thursday 5:00pm to 6:30pm Sessions
Track A- Academic and Policy: Organizing: Challenges and Opportunities
Thursday 5:00-6:30 Penelope Saunders, Brenda Costley, and Peter Bailey: Voices not included: Challenging elements of organizing around “sex work” (Cross-listed with Track B)
The sex worker rights movement has resurged in the United States since 2005 with the emergence of groups like the Desiree Alliance, SWOP USA, SWOP Chapters and the growth and expansion of direct service providers working with different communities of sex workers. However, organizing on a mass scale for sex workers' rights is still beginning, resources are limited and inclusion of different communities only partial. The network of allied organizations using the term "sex work" is attempting to move beyond exclusions of the past (ie that the movement for rights is lead primarily by relatively more privileged, English speaking, women who adopt the term "sex worker" to describe themselves) by exploring social justice frameworks, anti-racism, gender justice and more. But exploring these issues is difficult and discussions only just beginning.

This workshop/panel discussion intends to be part of these discussions. Presenters will speak about the ways in which various issues which have not yet been fully expressed in the current re-emerging movement for rights. How can people who identify as sex workers be allies to those people who engage in sex for the things they need but do not identify as sex workers? What do people from highly marginalized communities (women drug users of color, young men of color, trans street workers drug users and more) know and opine about current approaches of sex worker rights organizing? What can be included as part of "sex worker rights organizing" and what can be/is being addressed elsewhere by harm reductionists, communities of color, groups working to address street economies in general?


Thursday 5:00-6:30 Lee Harington: How Much an Hour? (Cross-listed with Track D)
Learn first hand what the wide variety of sex work in America looks like straight from the man (and woman) living it. My tale takes you from the life of a fetish model and adult film actress, to that of a male pornographer and conceptual erotic artist. You will journey from being an escort, to hiring them. Explore the adventure of being a high priced Dominatrix, then learn to find erotic employment as a transgendered male while navigating the life of a full time sexuality educator. Having had my first exposure to street sex work at the age of 14, to lecturing internationally on erotic authenticity, I have been part of or held hands with most sides of the sex industry- and through my eyes, so can you.
Track B- Activism
Thursday 5:00-6:30 Penelope Saunders, Brenda Costley, and Peter Bailey: Voices not included: Challenging elements of organizing around “sex work” (Cross-listed with Track A)
Track C- Art, Entertainment, and Media
Thursday 5:00-6:30 Solo Performance Day 2
Track D- Business Development
Thursday 5:00-6:30 Lee Harington: How Much an Hour? (Cross-listed with Track A)
Thursday 5:00-5:40 Panel w/ Bradley Hart: Tricks, Training and Transitions
This panel discussion will focus on the experiences and perspectives of older sex workers (40+). The discussion will explore both the challenges and rewards of getting older in the various fields of adult entertainment and erotic services, including various paths of transition both within the sex industry and transitioning out of the industry.
Thursday 5:50-6:30 Shawn Roop: Sessions that Heal: Sexual Healing with Pleasure
Explore the emerging sacred/spiritual sex work that is creating massive consciousness around union of the pleasure of the body and the opening that welcomes in spirit, as clients transform while we hold grounded space for them to awaken as a whole being. This work reaches men, women and couples, straight, bi or gay. There are times when you know your work reaches people, and you see change. There are some of us who know this work is needed, magical and offers huge rewards. Explore systems like Tantra and Taoism that offer sacred sexual wisdom and carry a long lineage of sacred prostitution.  
Topics:

Understanding Tantra


Orgasmic wisdom
Sexual dysfunction dealt with ease
Finding God in bed
Uncovering unresolved emotions through sex
Healing PTS (Post Traumatic Syndrome) and returning military members
Creating sexual mastery
Working with expansive sexual energy
Track E- Harm Reduction and Outreach
Thursday 5:00-5:30 Higashi, Y., Kaname, Y., and Yagi, K.: Sexual Health Risks Faced by Female Sex Workers in Japan
Background: Although Japan outlawed prostitution in 1956, the utilization of sex work is generally accepted and a wide range of legal and illegal services can be found within the sex industry. The fastest growing sex industry is “Fashion/Delivery Health,” but because coitus remains illegal and is not outwardly offered, condoms are typically not available for sex workers at work.

Methods: Snow-ball sampling was conducted from December 2009 to January 2010 and 151 Japanese female sex workers were recruited from the “Fashion/Delivery Health” service from Tokyo and Yokohama. They completed a self-administered questionnaire covering demographics and sex work practices.



Results: Among the respondents (N=151), the types of services currently provided include hand jobs (93.4%), deep kissing (88.7%), fellatio (88.7%), ejaculation into the mouth (84.1%), “Sumata” (rubbing the client’s penis with their genitals without penetration) (88.1%), licking scrotums (86.8%), and cunnilingus (86.8%). 72.8% indicated having contracted some type of STIs in the past, and 31.8% believed that they have been infected with STIs through transactional sex. 58.9% did not use a condom during their last sex service which included “Sumata” (44.7%), ejaculation into the mouth (43.3%), anal sex (2.1%), and coitus (0.7%). The most common reasons for not using condoms were “type of service did not require a condom” (47.7%), “prohibited by shop owner or manager” (11.2%), “affects client’s erection” (6.0%), and “could not turn down clients request” (4.6%).

Discussion: Within the popular “Fashion/Delivery Health” industry, a wide range of sexual services are available and often provided, yet the illegal status of coitus fosters an environment where condoms are viewed as less needed and are not typically available. There is a need to increase safe sex work practices by encouraging business owners/managers to make condoms available and altering clients’ and sex workers’ perspectives and behaviors relating to the use of condoms.

Thursday 5:30-6:00 Sarah Sloane: Making Safer Sex (and play) Sexier
How do you use a condom without it spoiling the mood? How the heck do you use a dental dam? What was she using that saran wrap for? Does alcohol kill STD viruses off of sex toys? Really, how easy is it to transmit HPV? Want answers? Want a safe place to ask those questions you thought might be too ’stupid’? Come on over for a fun tour of safer sex supplies and differently creative ways of using them – including how to easily put a condom on without using your hands! You will also get the most current information on how various diseases are transmitted and how easy they are to kill, so that you can make thoughtful choices on how and where you play. Bring your open mind, your questions, and your creativity out to have fun with us!


Directory: conference
conference -> Tilte : a critical examination of the police relations with bbc
conference -> Eavesdropping on a virtuous circle Richard Whately and the Oriel Noetics. Elena Pasquini Douglas uwa business School
conference -> Simulation and Prediction of Storm Surges, Waves, and Morphological Changes due to Tropical Cyclones by Using a pc-based Integrated Coastal Process Model
conference -> Panel 0511 Disability and Difference I: Post-War Journeys through Disability
conference -> Do remittances have a flip side? A general equilibrium analysis of remittances, labor supply responses and policy options for Jamaica* Maurizio Bussolo and Denis Medvedev
conference -> Conference approval process made easy for acm in cooperation conferences
conference ->  Proceedings of gt2009 asme turbo Expo 2009: Power for Land, Sea and Air Orlando, Florida, USA gt2009-59981 dynamics of premixed h2/CH4 flames under near blowoff conditions
conference -> South Korea’s Economic Future: Industrial Policy, or Economic Democracy?
conference -> Asset rotator Cuff Rehabilitation Course Faculty Dr. Spero Karas
conference -> Acm word Template for sig site

Download 374.51 Kb.

Share with your friends:
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page