Biradavolu Monica Rao, Burris Scott, George Annie, Jena Asima, Blankenship Kim M
Duke Global Health Institute, Durham, NC, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2009 Apr;68(8):1541-7. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.01.040. Epub 2009 Mar 2.
There is an argument that policing practices exacerbate HIV risk, particularly for female sex workers. Interventions that mobilize sex workers to seek changes in laws and law enforcement practices have been prominent in India and have received considerable scholarly attention. Yet, there are few studies on the strategies sex worker advocates use to modify police behavior or the struggles they face in challenging state institutions. This paper draws upon contemporary theories of governance and non-state regulation to analyze the evolving strategies of an HIV prevention non-governmental organization (NGO) and female sex worker community-based organizations (CBOs) to reform police practices in southern India. Using detailed ethnographic observations of NGO and CBO activities over a two year period, and key informant interviews with various actors in the sex trade, this paper shows how a powerless group of marginalized and stigmatized women were able to leverage the combined forces of community empowerment, collective action and network-based governance to regulate a powerful state actor, and considers the impact of the advocacy strategies on sex worker well-being.
有一种观点认为,治安管理措施会加剧感染艾滋病毒的风险,尤其是对女性性工作者而言。在印度,动员性工作者寻求法律及执法实践变革的干预措施颇为突出,并受到了学术界的广泛关注。然而,关于性工作者倡导者用以改变警察行为的策略,或他们在挑战国家机构时所面临的斗争,相关研究却很少。本文运用当代治理理论和非国家监管理论,分析了印度南部一个艾滋病毒预防非政府组织(NGO)和女性性工作者社区组织(CBO)为改革警察实践而不断演变的策略。通过对该非政府组织和社区组织两年活动的详细人种志观察,以及对性交易中各类行为者的关键信息人访谈,本文展示了一群被边缘化和污名化的弱势女性如何能够借助社区赋权、集体行动和基于网络的治理的合力,来监管一个强大的国家行为者,并探讨了这些倡导策略对性工作者福祉的影响。