Protecting Sex Workers wrote:Sex work, in this resolution, refers to the field of employment or self-employment involving the performance of sexual acts in exchange for income.
Regulating the Sex Industry wrote:In this resolution, a “sex worker” is any consenting adult who receives a source of income from sexual services, performances, or any other consensual sexual act;
Protecting Sex Workers wrote:Each sex work institution is to clearly inform all their sex workers of their rights and duties under this resolution, as well as any other rights and duties in sex work granted to them under national law. Each member nation is to directly inform all self-employed sex workers under its jurisdiction of the same.
Regulating the Sex Industry wrote:Before licensing any new workers, that body must [i]nform workers of their individual rights during sex work, including their rights to consent and protection;
Protecting Sex Workers wrote:Sex workers, sex work clients, and other entities shall have the right to report violations of this resolution, and have them duly investigated, without interference from any sex work institution. To that end, each member nation is to create an impartial means for privately reporting violations of this resolution.
- All such reports are to be promptly investigated by that member nation. Failure for that nation to do so shall result in that report being investigated by the WA Commission on Human Rights (WACHR).
- Member nations or the WACHR may refuse to investigate clearly frivolous reports, and penalise them when clearly made with knowing frivolity.
Regulating the Sex Industry wrote:Member nations that legalize any form of sex work must establish a national body for the regulation of the sex industry in their nation. That body must [e]stablish and upkeep a private and impartial channel for reporting and addressing abuse, unfair treatment, discrimination, or subversion of individual rights in any sex work context; Any valid reported complaints must be investigated thoroughly by said body.


