Sentences with phrase «outed as a sex worker»

Dupre, in contrast, is «having a rough go»; surely, coming back from being outed as a sex worker who brought down a politician is no easy feat.

Not exact matches

Often portrayed as dominating the sex industry, the scale of the victims of human trafficking represents a minority of sex workers in the UK: less than 10 % of female sex workers (2600 out of 30000) working indoors have been trafficked according to the Association of Chief Police Officers» 2010 report.
«We know that the government's policies in the policing and crime bill although they are described as intending to protect vulnerable women, they will in fact increase the level of violence sex workers experience - both indoors and out
Introducing itself to the world at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival and creating substantial buzz in film festivals the world over before opening in an elite listing of American cinemas in July, Sean Baker's fifth feature plays out with genuine emotion and manifests as an eye - opening day - in - the - life of two transgender sex workers on the streets of Los Angeles.
He was later caught out in a silly matter concerning a sex worker whom he had recruited as a partner and this very considerable and able business man was brought low, but he turned his disadvantage and his humiliation into a positive thing, he wrote this book The Glass Closet it is book about why it is in the interest of employers to reach out to everybody, to reach out to women, to reach out to minorities, to reach out to minorities on the grounds of gender, on the grounds of race, on the grounds of sexuality and he makes the point as the CEO of one of the 500 biggest corporation in the world this I in the interest of the shareholders, in the interest of the business and it also in the interest of the employees and those who work with them.
The trial court held that the bawdy house provision, which prevented sex trade workers from offering their services out of fixed indoor locations such as brothels, or their own homes, breached s. 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which guarantees the right to life, liberty and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.
The Court sided with sex workers» assertions that barriers, such as lack of resources and fear of being outed, made it next to impossible for an individual sex worker in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver to mount such a complex constitutional challenge.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z