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OOCly
Sex Work Act
A resolution to restrict civil freedoms in the interest of moral decency.Category: Moral DecencyStrength: MildProposed by: Tinhampton
Recalling that this body has taken indirect action to protect sex workers via:Noting that it has said nothing about sex work in and of itself since the repeal of GA#179 "Clean Prostitute Act," and
- GA#23 "Ban on Slavery and Trafficking," which forbids trafficking in persons,
- GA#383 "Sexual Privacy Act," which authorises all private, consensual sexual activity between multiple people that does not harm others, and
- GA#606 "Universal STI Counteraction," which requires that free tests and treatments for sexually transmitted infections (STIs) be offered to sex workers (among others) and institutes contact tracing programmes to help alert those who may have been infected with STIs by others, but
Seeking to strike a balance between the member state's right to authorise sex work, the participants' rights to engage in it and the interests of public health...
The General Assembly hereby:
- reserves to each member state the decision to legalise, decriminalise or forbid the sale or purchase of sex,
- forbids any person in a member state from selling or purchasing sex if they:
- do not, or otherwise cannot, affirmatively consent to doing so (including due to being under the age of consent), or
- are currently infected with an STI which they can transmit to other people,
- requires purchasers of sex in member states to follow the seller's instructions on the proper use of barrier protection while having sex with them,
- similarly encourages sellers of sex to properly use barrier protection while having sex,
- further requires sellers of sex in member states to be regularly tested, free of charge, for any STIs that are prevalent in their area,
- demands that member states which do not forbid the purchase of sex ensure that prospective purchasers of sex can readily access free STI testing, and
- clarifies that all Articles of this resolution, except Article b(i), are subject to prior and standing international law.