The Commercial Sex Industry

Worker Organizations in the Sex Industry

Strippers United

Stories, Lessons & Analysis

Sex, Work, and Sex Work

Sex Work: Solidarity Not Salvation

Sex Work Organisation in the Global South

Sex Work Will Not Be Empowering Until it is Organized

Sex as Work and Sex Work: A Marxian Take

Strippers Greatest Protection is each other

Precarious Intimacies: the European Border Regime and Migrant Sex Work (2016)

How a Group of Dancers Sparked a Unionization Effort at a Los Angeles Strip Club

The Star Garden Strip Club Strike is Part of the History of Sex Worker Organizing

Grin and Bare it All: Against Liberal Conceptions of Sex Work

The Bolivian Sex Workers Strike (2007)

Turkish Women Hold Sex Strike For Water System Repair (2001)

Multimedia about Organizing in the Sex Industry

WCH | The Exotic Dancer’s Union (podcast)

Books about Organizing in the Sex Industry

Saving Our Own Lives: A Liberatory Practice of Harm Reduction (2022)

Liberatory Harm Reduction is one of the most important interventions of the 20th century, and yet a compilation of its critical stories and voices was, until now, seemingly nowhere to be found. Saving Our Own Lives, an anthology of essays from long-time organizer Shira Hassan, fills this gap by telling the stories of how sex workers, Black, Indigenous, and people of color, queer folks, trans, gender non-conforming, and two-spirit people are – and have been – building systems of change and support outside the societal frameworks of oppression and exploitation. This is a collective story of trans women of color, who were sex workers and radical political organizers, who created shared housing to ensure that young people had safe places to sleep. It is the story of clean syringes, “liberated” from empathetic doctors’ offices by activists who were punk women of color who distributed them among injection drug users in squats in the East Village, and the early AIDS activists who made sure that everyone knew how to use them. It is the story of Black Panthers and the Young Lords taking over Lincoln Park Hospital in the Bronx to demand and ultimately create community-accessible drug treatment programs; and of bad date sheets passed between sex workers in Portland, who created a data collection tool that changed how prison abolitionists track systemic violence.

At a political moment when Liberatory Harm Reduction and mutual aid are more important than ever, this book serves as an inspiration and a catalyst for radical transformation of our world.