Advertisement

Mexico’s sex workers seek employment rights both online and on the streets

  • A rights group is seeking the decriminalisation of sex work, its formal recognition as a job, access to social security for those working online and in person
  • Sex workers in Mexico City typically encounter discrimination from police, hospitals, prosecutors’ offices and ambulances

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Sex workers wait to receive financial help in Mexico City during in 2020 during Covid closures. Photo: EPA-EFE

Natalia Lane’s work is hybrid – like most jobs these days. So the 34-year-old graduate creates exciting online content for half her day then gives over the rest to in-person services.

Advertisement
Lane, though, is a sex worker, so her job comes without any of the basic rights, benefits or protections that jobs in Mexico routinely offer. Something she is desperate to change.

“I’ve been a sex worker for 14 years. How much could I have contributed so far towards my social security, a house loan, or a credit?” said Lane, a human rights advocate who switched to sex work to pay for her bachelor’s degree in communications.

“I have nothing to account for the last 14 years of work, unlike the rest of the working class.”

Since the pandemic and ensuing cost of living crisis, she has seen a boom in online sex work – but like fellow sex workers, federal laws bar her from social security and other labour rights.

Advertisement

So on May 7, a group of sex workers launched CLaP!, a first-of-its-kind coalition that wants the decriminalisation of sex work, its formal recognition as a job, and access to social security for those working online and in person.

Advertisement