
Every year, around this time, the airwaves in whatever city is hosting the Super Bowl are flooded with public services announcements about sex trafficking. Billboards go up. Police officers receive special training. Media asks organizations that work to reduce trafficking to comment on the “biggest sex trafficking event of the year.”
There is no evidence that the actual volume of sex trafficking increases as a result of the Super Bowl. More importantly, we collectively try to make the point that the hype often leads to a damaging response - arresting people who are directly selling sex.
Historically, the anti-trafficking and sex worker rights movements have struggled to find common ground and the disagreements have sometimes become heated. But this is one thing we passionately agree upon. We believe our time, talent, and treasure is best invested toward supporting the direct needs of those with lived experience, as opposed to coercive intervention. There are others. Our areas of agreement are based in shared deeply held values and commitments: To the dignity of each and every human being and to an end to violence, against people in the sex trades, to name a few.
With that in mind, we come together this January - Human Trafficking Awareness and Prevention Month, to offer the following shared recommendations.
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