Dear allies!
I hope this message finds you well. I'm reaching out to ask for your support in challenging a deeply concerning legislative development in Sweden.
The Swedish government has proposed an expansion of its criminalisation framework on sex work to include the purchase of sexual acts performed remotely, such as webcamming and erotic content creation. This would significantly broaden the scope of criminal liability and introduce new harms to sex workers, particularly those who operate online. We were contacted by our national member organisation, Red Umbrella Sweden who asked our support in raising awareness and fight against this proposal. The proposed law will be voted on May 20th.
We have prepared a public sign-on statement (please keep this confidential for the time-being and do not share with others) urging the government to reject this proposal. We would appreciate if your organisation would add your name in support.
Why it matters?
This proposal, while framed as a protective measure, would in fact:
- Criminalise consensual digital labour and remove one of the safest, most autonomous income sources available to many sex workers.
- Exacerbate the harms of client criminalisation, which is already shown by global research to increase stigma, decrease safety, and limit access to justice for sex workers.
- Expand state surveillance, threatening privacy and digital rights for sex workers, clients, and platforms alike.
- Introduce vague and overbroad legal language that risks criminalising consensual relationships and undermines legal clarity.
- Threaten Sweden's constitutional protections on freedom of expression.
As the statement outlines, we are calling on the Swedish government to:
- Withdraw the proposal in its current form
- Engage directly with sex workers and digital rights experts
- Protect digital safety and income rights of workers
- Invest in services, not criminalisation
We believe this is a critical moment to stand in solidarity with sex workers, defend digital rights, and push back against carceral approaches that harm the very people they claim to protect.
If your organisation would like to sign on, please reply to this email with:
- The name of your organisation
- The name and role of a signatory contact person (for transparency only, not for publication)
Alternatively, you can add your support via this form: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1fUS9cNXNkxNLArtYPDlIn4_97mIwMzkfLsGsTyGNNbs/edit?tab=t.0#heading=h.te3a8mvychdj
We aim to publish the statement on April 22, so we kindly ask for responses by then. We will keep the statement open for signatures after this date also, however we would like to have some support already shown when we first launch the campaign.What else you can do to help?- It would be great if you have contacts in Sweden - policymakers, trusted journalists or civil society organisations - that are pro sex workers' rights, please put us in touch with.
Thank you for your continued commitment to human rights and justice./Kira Stellar and ESWA