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Harm Reduction Lessons for Reproductive Justice

Amanda Allen's picture

Drug policy has benefited from the harm reduction movement's innovative approach to improving personal safety.  The application of a harm reduction model to reproductive justice has the potential to transform the way we view reproductive justice issues and mobilize support for issues that are traditionally marginalized within the movement.  I want to consider what we can learn from the harm reduction movement in advocating for sex workers' rights and comprehensive sex education.

Harm reduction is a public health philosophy that emphasizes individual safety, regardless of lifestyle choices, over prohibition.  This approach acknowledges that some individuals may continue to engage in risky behaviors and aims to address the needs created by those behaviors.  The harm reduction movement spearheaded efforts to improve safety and provide services to substance abusers, such as safer injection sites for heroin addicts - the theory being that if addicts were going to use, at least providing them with clean needles would benefit the addicts themselves as well as the overall public health.  Because harm reduction focuses on social and environmental aspects of risky behavior, its application to sex work is intuitive.  

Sex workers face violations of basic human rights on a daily basis, including violence at the hands of clients as well as police brutality.  Additionally, many sex workers must cope with homelessness, substance dependency, and extreme poverty and desperation.  Because street-based sex workers are predominantly indigent women of color, selective law enforcement practices disproportionately target poor, minority women.

Sex workers are isolated from health care services because of fear of arrest and prosecution, as well as the increasingly inaccessible cost of such care.  Street-based sex workers in particular face health risks that the average worker does not, such as violence (perpetrated by police and clients), exposure to sexually transmitted infections and HIV/AIDS, and exposure to the elements.  When sex workers do access health care services, it is generally because of an emergency; thus, lack of access to preventative services is a serious health concern for sex workers.

In the context of providing services and outreach to sex workers, then, an application of the harm reduction model must take into account how various and overlapping forms of oppression create unique challenges for sex workers:  namely, substance abuse problems and lack of resources to access health care.  Services should include the provision of safer sex kits to sex workers and training in condom-negotiation skills, as well as free and confidential STD testing and information about HIV/AIDS.  Holistic services should also embrace substance abuse counseling and clean needles for drug use and hormone injections for transgendered sex workers who utilize hormone therapy.  Programs that collaborate across disciplines would address sex workers' needs the most effectively by tackling substance abuse, safe housing, domestic violence, and health care.

So, why is this an issue of reproductive justice? First, this approach recognizes that sex workers are often in the industry for reasons beyond their control, such as economic hardship or inability to enter or reenter the workforce due to lack of recognized work experience or a criminal record.  In this respect, this acknowledgement of the multiplicities of oppression reflects the values of the reproductive justice movement-harm reduction recognizes that the decision to enter or remain in the sex industry can be (but is not always) a result of economic, racial, and gender injustice.  Accordingly, rather than criminalize, patronize or demonize sex workers, harm reduction seeks to provide safer options for those who choose to continue in the sex industry.  And, because a harm reduction approach ascribes no moral judgment to the activities of others, the traditional hierarchy assumed by service provision is disrupted.  Significantly, this challenges the notion that those in positions of power "know best" while empowering sex workers to make the healthiest choice possible for themselves under their individual circumstances.  This approach also empowers sex workers to use contraceptives and educate themselves on sexual health issues.  Importantly, then, application of the harm reduction model does not demean the work that sex workers do because it both identifies the intersection of race, class, and gender-based oppression that often create the need to continue working in the sex industry and recognizes that some sex workers remain in the industry by choice.

I have previously blogged about abstinence-only programs, but I think it's important to consider sex ed in light of harm reduction as well.  The philosophies which underlie harm reduction call for the elimination of funding for abstinence-only education in schools and implementation of comprehensive, sex-positive sex ed.  Abstinence-only education does not actually result in teens abstaining from sex, and instead denies them critical information about sexually transmitted diseases, pregnancy prevention, and, yes - sexuality itself. 

Harm reduction acknowledges that people - and, in this case, young people - make choices that may put their health or well-being at risk, and seeks to provide information to most safely make those choices rather than administer judgment or condescension.  Like the earliest manifestations of the harm reduction movement-safer injection sites combined with resources and support for substance abusers who were trying to stop using drugs-comprehensive sex education presents young people with information and options.  And, like its predecessors in the movement, this information is health- and life-saving.  For teens who are having sex or are going to have sex, comprehensive sex education equips them with the tools and information they need to make that decision in a way that protects them from diseases and unwanted pregnancies as well as providing them with a healthy outlook on sexuality. 

Reproductive justice posits that all people have a right to information required to attain sexual and reproductive self-determination.  Providing students with comprehensive sex education reflects the principles that motivate the harm reduction movement, and as such gives students the tools they need to make healthy decisions about their bodies, their relationships, and their futures.

This post first appeared on Repossess Reproductive Justice.


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4 comments
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Great thinking on harm reduction and how its application is useful in other (non-drug use related) situations. I agree with you on sex workers and am sure that you mean both female and male SW. Let's also apply to ALL areas of "reproductive justice", which I am sure covers all human rights to a happy and health (and disease and discrimination free) sex life of one's own choosing. Harm reduction applied to areas such as male-male and female-female sexual activities would include the decriminalization of same-sex sex, too - a serious issue facing many in the developing world. Thanks again!!

Submitted by Anonymous on March 24, 2009 - 12:14am.

Thank you Amanda for this thoughtful piece. I enjoyed the read and find your points spot on. Well done.

Submitted by Anonymous on March 24, 2009 - 9:12am.

Great piece Amanda!!

Submitted by Sheena Bosket on March 24, 2009 - 4:08pm.

Thanks but not thank. The real story here is how the 'sex worker rights activists’ and those who say they care about 'us' has sold out the prostitutes’ rights movement to the harm reduction industry, an extension of the prison industrial complex.
Do your home work.
I think what you may have been trying to get at is the relationship between reproductive health movement and sex worker rights movement. But you missed some historic lines of departure.
First of all, the reproductive health movement came after the feminist kicked out the prostitutes and the lesbians in the early 60's and 70's. They thought having us would be too controversial to move women's equality forward. By doing so, they created the more sell able notion of 'reproductive rights’ and stood by while the high court gave co ownership of our 'reproductive rights' to the American Medical Association. Now women can only get an abortion/contraception from the male centered and controlled medical association.
This isolating approach resulted in excommunicating female sex organs used for sexual purposes. The consequences are now only 17 states have legal abortion. So given this result for the 'reproductive rights for women, I'd suggest that those concerned with sex worker's rights to gain access to medical help, stop buying into this harm reduction crap. It's based on false denigrating facts like we're all drug addicted and disease ridden and it does nothing to challenge the fact that our occupation is occupied by the enforcement of the anti prostitution laws which is THE primary source of harm. Not violence from clients. There’s a difference between a client and a perpetrator. The harm reduction philosophy relies on the continued criminalization of my occupation as a means to gain access to us poor prostitutes to 'deliver services'. The harm reduction approach is another sell out of ownership of m body by those who profit off the continued occupation of my female sex organs to the male centered medical association and law enforcement.

There is a relationship though. The relationship between one's sex organs and reproductive use needs to reunited. It can start with the idea of bodily freedom which includes using our sex organs for what ever we want and have medical health come from that place in stead of the other way around.

Submitted by maxine doogan on March 25, 2009 - 12:10pm.