Sex Work, Essential Work: A Historical and (Necro)Political Analysis of Sex Work in Times of COVID-19 in Brazil
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Sex, Work, and the Law in Brazil
2.1. Labor and Criminal Laws
2.2. Legislative Struggles and Prostitute Activism
2.3. Sex Workers, Not Government Workers
3. Neglect and Necropolitics
4. The Red Light District Can’t Stop: Sex Worker Organization Activities in Combatting COVID-19
4.1. Warrior Women Association (Associação Mulheres Guerreiras—Unidas Pelo Respeito: AMG), Campinas-SP
4.2. “We Are the Seeds of Marielle, Sprouting against Bolsonaro”: Rio de Janeiro, CasaNem
4.3. Vila Mimosa Red Light District, Rio de Janeiro
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | |
2 | |
3 | By “prostitution”, we mean the sale of direct, physical sexual acts, differentiated from a more generalized “sex work”, which can include phone sex and stripping. |
4 | Blanchette, Murray, Silva and Simões are also all part of an extension project to combat COVID-19 created by the UFRJ-Macaé, and specifically, this project’s working group on Sex Work Street Populations. |
5 | The CBO’s description of sex work can be found at http://www.mtecbo.gov.br/cbosite/pages/pesquisas/BuscaPorTituloResultado.jsf. |
6 | Nearly a decade earlier, in 2003, then, Federal Congressman Fernando Gabeira, at that point a member of the Workers’ Party (Partido dos Trabalhadores—PT), introduced Bill #98/2003 to fully decriminalize sex work, which was also eventually tabled by Congress. |
7 | While this might sound like a positive thing for anglophone readers, it is important to remember that the Brazilian sex workers’ rights movement founded by Leite and Barreto has as one of its central points reclamation of the word “whore” as a marker of group empowerment through the reversal of stigmatizing symbolism. By eliminating “whore” from the CBO’s definition of sex work in this context, the Federal Labor Ministry was obviously trying to distance itself from the political and polemical sex workers’ struggle in Brazil. |
8 | Co-author Blanchette represented Davida on both the state and federal anti-trafficking committees, in the latter case, together with Belo Horizonte-based sex worker leader Aparecida Viera. Working with other grass-roots feminist and LGBT organizations in the committee, they were able to ensure that Brazil’s new 2016 trafficking laws did not automatically conflate prostitution with trafficking. This section is based on Blanchette’s on-going representative and ethnographic experiences in the political field of Brazilian State anti-trafficking policy as a member of the Rio de Janeiro state anti-slave labor committee. |
9 | These connections have been frequently highlighted by the Brazilian media and closely accompanied and researched by the bilingual online news outlet Intercept. See Glennwald and Pougy: https://theintercept.com/2019/03/18/jair-bolsonaro-family-militias-gangs-brazil/. |
10 | This is an immense topic that is far too large to tackle here. See Lia Zanotti’s article (2020), where she provides readers with an overview of the Bolsonaro government’s human rights policies, with a special focus on how these have affected women and Black and brown Brazilians (Zanotti 2020). |
11 | CUT is one of Brazil’s oldest labor organizations, affiliated with the Workers’ Party (PT). The branch office is one of many in the interior of the State of São Paulo, organizing the local unions. The CUT branch has been one of the Association’s main partners since 2008, when the Association was recognized as a worker’s organization and invited to participate in the CUT. This implies the AGM’s support of and by all unions affiliated to the CUT. |
12 | For more information on the Association’s work, see (Tavares 2014; Bonomi 2019). |
13 | The Pastoral da Mulher Marginalizada is an NGO connected to several different social movements, as well as the Catholic Liberation Theology movement. It has progressive views on human rights issues, but is abolitionist with regards to prostitution, understanding it as one of the generative institutions of women’s exploitation in capitalist society (Skackauskas 2014). |
14 | This is an emergency directed towards informal laborers, micro-entrepreneurs, independent workers, and the unemployed. Its goal is to provide emergency financial aid during the COVID 19 crisis. For more information, see https://auxilio.caixa.gov.br/#/inicio. |
15 | This was widely covered and recognized by the media. For one example, see: https://g1.globo.com/rj/rio-de-janeiro/noticia/2019/07/20/acervo-artistico-e-ossada-sao-achados-em-predio-abandonado-em-copacabana.ghtml. |
16 | |
17 | Workers’ card, where all work sanctioned by labor laws is formally registered in an individual paper book. |
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Share and Cite
Santos, B.; Siqueira, I.; Oliveira, C.; Murray, L.; Blanchette, T.; Bonomi, C.; da Silva, A.P.; Simões, S. Sex Work, Essential Work: A Historical and (Necro)Political Analysis of Sex Work in Times of COVID-19 in Brazil. Soc. Sci. 2021, 10, 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci10010002
Santos B, Siqueira I, Oliveira C, Murray L, Blanchette T, Bonomi C, da Silva AP, Simões S. Sex Work, Essential Work: A Historical and (Necro)Political Analysis of Sex Work in Times of COVID-19 in Brazil. Social Sciences. 2021; 10(1):2. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci10010002
Chicago/Turabian StyleSantos, Betania, Indianarae Siqueira, Cristiane Oliveira, Laura Murray, Thaddeus Blanchette, Carolina Bonomi, Ana Paula da Silva, and Soraya Simões. 2021. "Sex Work, Essential Work: A Historical and (Necro)Political Analysis of Sex Work in Times of COVID-19 in Brazil" Social Sciences 10, no. 1: 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci10010002
APA StyleSantos, B., Siqueira, I., Oliveira, C., Murray, L., Blanchette, T., Bonomi, C., da Silva, A. P., & Simões, S. (2021). Sex Work, Essential Work: A Historical and (Necro)Political Analysis of Sex Work in Times of COVID-19 in Brazil. Social Sciences, 10(1), 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci10010002