Scarlet Alliance is Australia's national peaksex worker organisation. It was formed in 1989.[1] As an organisation maintained entirely by current and former sex workers,[2] Scarlet Alliance aims to achieve equality, social, legal, political, cultural and economic justice for workers in the sex industry.[3]
Funding
Since its inception, Scarlet Alliance has primarily relied on volunteers to manage the organisation. Despite receiving various governmental funding grants over the last decade and a half,[4] the majority of Scarlet Alliance's work has remained unfunded. The organisation has stated its commitment to aims and objectives, to its membership and the broader sex worker community as always coming first. However, if funding can be sourced towards supporting key areas of this work without compromising political objectives, then it has been sought in order to boost the organisation's capacity as well as to support greater equity and access to events such as the annual national forum. In 2004 Scarlet Alliance was granted government funding to undertake project work in Australia and within the Asia-Pacific region. This funding came to an end in 2012 when the Australian government allocated a greater amount of "foreign aid" towards running offshore detention facilities (defunding other projects).[citation needed]
Scarlet Alliance also employed two part-time bilingual migrant sex workers (Thai, Chinese and/or Korean) for nine years as part of a successful migration project with Empower Thailand. The project was informed by a steering committee of migrant sex workers across Australia and ensured migrant sex workers were represented in Australia's round table which met to response to trafficking.[citation needed]
Aim
Scarlet Alliance advocates on behalf of a membership consisting of:
regional and international funding bodies[14][15][16]
Scarlet Alliance aims to promote an increased understanding of sex workers and the issues affecting them. The organisation lobbies for policies which recognise sex workers as self-determining agents, with the option to choose where and how they work. Scarlet Alliance has undertaken campaigns to increase occupational health and safety standards in the sex industry,[17] to recognize the human rights and labour rights of sex workers, and to repeal laws and policies which discriminate against sex workers.[18][19][20]
Organisation
As a national organisation, Scarlet Alliance facilitates an annual membership forum which is attended by sex worker delegates from around Australia.[21] Every year the forum is held in a different state to maximise the inclusion of local sex workers. An Annual General Meeting (AGM) and public symposium or rally are also included within the forum's program.
Scarlet Alliance holds training,[22] participates in forums and presents workshops at universities in Australia and within the Asia-Pacific region. The organisation aims to break down the stigma, negative stereotyping and popular misconceptions surrounding sex work.[23] Advocates from the organisation present evidence based research and information about who sex workers are, what is involved in sex work and why sex workers choose sex work.
Scarlet Alliance produces an annual magazine, proVision.[24] The magazine contains information about the organisation's activities, articles exploring current sex work policy issues and contributions from national and international sex workers. In keeping with the principle of community ownership, proVision is produced entirely by sex workers.
Scarlet Alliance networks with sister peer led sex worker organisations including:
Friends Frangipani Association in Papua New Guinea
Scarlet Alliance is a member of the Asia Pacific Network of Sex Workers[26] and the Global Network of Sex Work Projects (NSWP).[27]
Training
The Scarlet Alliance National Training and Assessment Program (SANTAP) contains two parts- a learning tool and an assessment framework. The assessment framework offers sex workers the opportunity to have their skills in peer education and community mobilisation formally recognised through recognition of prior learning by peer assessors. On completion of the multi-module assessment process, participants are awarded a nationally recognised diploma.
The learning tool provides new or existing sex worker peer educators the required knowledge and grounding to apply for the diploma.
The Scarlet Alliance National Training Project (SANTP) is an assessment package consisting of 14 core modules and 4 elective modules. The project provides sex worker peer educators with an assessment tool which formally recognises the unique skills they utilise in undertaking health promotion[28] and community development work within sex worker communities.[29] Participants in the training project are required to undertake an assessment process, supported by a qualified peer assessor, to achieve a nationally recognised Diploma of Community Education qualification.[30] To successfully achieve the qualification, participants are required to demonstrate and document how they have employed peer education principles in their work with sex workers.
The training package was developed as a strategy to assist sex worker organisations and projects to deliver a nationally consistent standard of peer education.[31]
Lobbying
Scarlet Alliance is a key advocate and participant[32] in HIV and sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevention work in Australia. Sex worker communities in Australia have high rates of condom use, and low rates of STIs, including HIV/AIDS.[33] The Australian sex industry's low rates of STIs and HIV has been attributed to sex worker communities self organising to form peer led sex worker advocacy organisations in the early years of the HIV epidemic. Sex worker organisations, including Scarlet Alliance, employed community development principles to educate sex workers, sex industry business owners and sex industry clients about the need to adopt safer sex practices and harm reduction strategies to avoid potentially contracting HIV.[34] Scarlet Alliance continues to lobby state and national governments about the difficulties of effective HIV prevention whilst sex work remains a criminalized occupation.[35][36][37]
Scarlet Alliance has advocated for the rights of migrant sex workers[38] for more than 15 years, and currently works to assist the Australian government[39] to develop anti-trafficking policy which does not single out the sex industry for "raids and rescues".[40][41][42] Scarlet Alliance advocates for the provision of work visas for migrant sex workers.[43] The organisation argues that through accessing legal migration options, migrant sex workers are less susceptible to entering into verbal "debt bondage" contracts[44] as an incentive to obtain passage to, and work within, Australia.
Scarlet Alliance's objectives, policies and current campaign issues are available on their website.[45]