Browse our resources dedicated to empowering communties with tools for movements.
Each year the Department of State issues a request for information on how the US is responding to the issue of human trafficking.
Each year the Department of State issues a request for information on how the US is responding to the issue of human trafficking.
Since 1999 eight countries around the world have changed their legal regimes regarding sex work to focus on the criminalization of clients, known as the "End Demand" model.
This article by Justice Rivera was originally published in Tits and Sass in 2016 but the frightening parallels between the wars on drugs and sex trafficking sadly hold true today.
This fact sheet, co-produced with NASTAD, outlines five competency areas in which drug user health programs can focus to provide baseline sex worker health and harm reduction services.
The way you think about and interact with “drugs” — substances like marijuana*, heroin, mushrooms, or cocaine and also caffeine, sugar, and alcohol — is a result of norms, expectations, and propaganda that are grounded in colonialist and imperialist ideologies.
Every anti-violence program serves people who trade sex, whether intentionally or not. This document breaks down five core competencies that anti-violence service providers should know when supporting people in the sex trades who face harm and violence.
This Webinar through the Positive Women's Network discusses the multitude of ways that women living with HIV are surveiled and punished, and promising strategies for ending criminalization.
RHJ consultant, Justice Rivera, contributed to this toolkit during their time serving on the SWOP USA board.
Download our poster describing the foundation of how we approach our work - by not just focusing on harm, but on how we seek healing, even when it makes us vulnerable.
Explore different frameworks of sex workers’ rights, and why it is integral to many areas of social justice.
RHJ consultant, Justice designed and facilitated a statewide group of queer and trans people of color who use drugs (QTPOCWUD) in Michigan to develop recommendations for reaching and meaningfully including QTPOCWUD in harm reduction programing for the Family Values Network and Michigan Harm Reduction.
Read Reframe Health and Justice's insights. Click here to go to the blog page.
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