Independent researcher and Director at the Kuria Foundation for Social Enterprise, Nairobi, Kenya.
Fellow and Senior Technical Advisor, Stigma and Discrimination, RTI International, Washington, DC, USA.
Health Hum Rights. 2020 Dec;22(2):199-212.
Discrimination and violence against sex workers by police are common in many populations and are associated with negative health outcomes, as well as being per se violations of human rights laws and norms. There is a close and mutually reinforcing nexus between legally actionable rights violations and stigma, and reducing human rights violations against sex workers likely requires both legal and societal interventions that address both. In this paper, we first aim to estimate levels of discrimination, violence, and stigma against women sex workers by police in Kenya. Second, we aim to estimate the association between manifestations of discrimination and stigma, on the one hand, and general health care utilization and consistent condom use, on the other. Using data from a survey of Kenyan sex workers, we document widespread discrimination and stigma. Through regression analyses, participants with the highest levels of all three categories of manifestations of discrimination and stigma reported significant lower consistent condom use. Those with the highest levels of witnessed/heard manifestations were significantly more likely to delay or avoid needed health care, and the highest level of experienced manifestations were associated with a marginally significant increase in delay or avoidance. Our findings document a plethora of violations of human rights obligations under Kenyan and international law.
在许多人群中,警察对性工作者的歧视和暴力行为很常见,这些行为与负面的健康结果有关,而且本身就违反了人权法律和规范。法律上可采取行动的侵犯权利行为与耻辱之间存在着密切和相互加强的关系,减少对性工作者的人权侵犯可能需要法律和社会干预措施同时解决这两个问题。在本文中,我们首先旨在估计肯尼亚警察对女性性工作者的歧视、暴力和耻辱程度。其次,我们旨在估计歧视和耻辱的表现与一般医疗保健利用和坚持使用避孕套之间的关联。我们使用肯尼亚性工作者调查的数据,记录了广泛的歧视和耻辱现象。通过回归分析,在所有三类歧视和耻辱表现中得分最高的参与者报告说,坚持使用避孕套的情况明显较低。那些目睹/听到表现最多的人更有可能延迟或避免必要的医疗保健,而经历最多表现的人则与延迟或避免治疗的可能性略有增加有关。我们的研究结果记录了肯尼亚和国际法规定的大量侵犯人权义务的行为。