[REPORT] Report on the Impact of China’s 2010 “Strike Hard Campaign”: A Crackdown on Sex Work

The 2010 “Strike Hard Campaign” put in place a zero tolerance policy on sex work, gambling and drugs all across China. While many brothels and popular clubs were closed ultimately sex workers continued work out in more remote areas. This geographic shift cut people off from essential health services, HIV/AIDS education, and even funeral services for women who die while cut off from their families.

Here in its first major report The China Sex Worker Organization Network Forum trained its members to document the effects of the crackdown. With interviews with close to 300 sex workers from around the country the report documents how “local stakeholders, including sex workers, owners of EEs and sex worker service organizations, see the impacts of these crackdowns and their effects on HIV intervention.”

The report (here in its original in Chinese and translated by volunteers in the network into English here), published in December 2011, finds that the crackdown was a disaster for them.


“我们感觉很骄傲” — 访问泰国性工作者机构EMPOWER

By Carol Wang
EMPOWER:”我们是性工作者。我们用自己的智慧和技巧挣钱。我们感到很骄傲,因为我们能够用自己的劳动所得去支持自己的家庭和生活。我们在工作中相互照顾;我们 为安全的工作条件、平等的待遇和权利而奋斗。我们为泰国的经济发展做出了很大贡献,很多游客为我们而来。我们也是活跃的公民,我们关心政治、经济、环境、法律、权利,等等。我们努力在社会中占有一席之地,发出自己的声音。有些人认为我们是麻烦的制造者,但实际上我们在帮助社会解决问题。我们是性工作者,我们是EMPOWER。”

[COMMENTARY] HIV/AIDS in Asia: Is It a Rights Issue?

Missed our panel at the Asia Society on HIV/AIDS and human rights? You can watch the video (1 hr, 20 minutes) online at the link below.

AIDS in Asia (Complete)

NEW YORK, December 1, 2010 – Joseph Amon, Joanne Csete, Sara L.M. Davis, Kevin Robert Frost, Daniel Wolfe explore human rights issues as they relate to AIDS in Asia. (1 hr., 20 min.)


[COMMENTARY] Emerging Human Rights Issues in China’s Response to HIV/AIDS

There was a visible presence for China during AIDS 2010, which included a delegation of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) from the country. Chinese officials also presented on the government’s work on HIV/AIDS, which elicited critical feedback from activists. In this article from the HIV/AIDS Policy and Law Review, conference attendees Sara L. M. Davis and Li Dan outline the main human rights issues in China’s response to HIV/AIDS.

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