Movement for the Abolition of Prostitution

What is the Nordic Model?

The Nordic Model (sometimes known as the Sex Buyer Law, and the Swedish, Abolitionist, Survivor or Equality Model) is an approach to prostitution that has been adopted in Sweden, Norway, Iceland, Northern Ireland, Canada, France, Ireland and Israel. It has several elements:

1. Decriminalisation of selling sex acts

Prostitution is inherently violent. Women should not be criminalised for the exploitation and abuse they endure.

2. Buying sex acts becomes a criminal offence

Buying human beings for sex is harmful, exploitative and can never be safe. We need to reduce the demand that drives sex trafficking.

3. Support and exit services

High quality, non-judgemental services to support those in prostitution and help them build a new life outside it, including: access to safe affordable housing; training and further education; child care; legal, debt and benefit advice; emotional and psychological support.

A holistic approach

A public information campaign; training for police and CPS; tackling the inequality and poverty that drive people into prostitution; effective laws against pimping and sex trafficking, with penalties that reflect the enormous damage they cause. Read more >>

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The parallels, the failure of the authorities & how treating females as commodities that men can trade and abuse with impunity reveals connections with the wider sex trade.

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To mark our tenth anniversary, this article explains how Nordic Model Now! began and what we did in the very early days.

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A prostitution survivor explains the reality of the ‘girlfriend experience’, how this is the model for AI girlfriends and the risks these pose.

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This open letter from a sex trafficking survivor calls on women’s organisations to stand with survivors and challenge men’s demand for prostitution.

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What are some of the lifelong consequences of prolonged trauma from involvement in the sex industry? – A survivor’s perspective

A call for everyone to listen to survivors of the sex industry and to understand the trauma they suffer and to show them compassion and grace.

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The dystopian landscape of porn, AI girlfriends, and sex robots and how they threaten our shared humanity and mutually satisfying relationships.

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Prostitution Survivors’ Testimony

Prostitution Survivors’ Testimony

Prostitution: Under the Grip of a Sociopath

Interview with Wendy Barnes by Francine Sporenda

Wendy and her daughter Latasha live in Southern California. Wendy works full time as a customer service representative. In her spare time she speaks publicly about her life while being trafficked and her journey out of trafficking and into ‘the real world’.

What’s your body count?

If you’ve never sold sex then there’s probably a good chance that you know the answer to the question, what’s your body count? When strangers pay to use your body, it quickly feels like that body is not your own. When that happens it’s better not to know the number. To escape the reality of it.

Jennifer

“The sex trade left me in a state of such low self-worth that I believed I might end up in a mental health institution. In addition to an unstable upbringing, this was a recipe for a disaster. But I fought back and I live to tell my story.”

1. Feminism is abolitionist!

Raped, assaulted, left for dead, robbed, insulted, threatened with death, having narrowly escaped AIDS, and other serious health risks, as well as Russian, Albanian, and slaughterhouse pimping networks in Zurich, I am a survivor.

Sick of all the ‘Happy Hooker’ myths?

Want people to know what prostitution is REALLY like?

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