Belgium Protects Sex Work Employees' Right To Refuse Customers, Sex Acts
A new labor law getting bad press is explicitly drafted to stop sex businesses from punishing workers who set boundaries.

"Belgian Government Will Intervene In Cases Where Prostitutes Refuse Sexual Acts Too Often." That headline, at a website called The Publica, certainly caught my attention. A new law in Belgium, the website claims, will enable "pimps to punish" sex workers "if they refuse sex more than 10 times in a six-month period. The Belgian Parliament voted for the law on May 3, with 93 in favor, zero opposed, and 33 abstentions."
Others have taken up this story with similarly salacious and critical tones.
As you might suspect, the truth is much less disturbing than these reports suggest. In fact, the law in question is aimed at protecting sex worker rights and autonomy.
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Decriminalization Takes Hold
First, some background: Belgium decriminalized sex work in 2022—making it an outlier in the European Union. While some other E.U. countries have legalized prostitution, their systems are highly regulated, leaving it a crime to sell or pay for sex acts in all but certain narrow circumstances (such as working in a licensed brothel or having a professional sex work certificate). Other E.U. countries have decriminalized selling sex in some circumstances but still criminalize paying for it.
Belgium decriminalized not just selling sex but also paying for sex and working with sex workers. That last bit is important, as it allows sex workers to pay people for ancillary services—such as security, administrative work, and accounting—without making those people criminals.
It's "important to note that it has never been illegal in Belgium to offer or pay for sexual services. Belgium's policy was to slowly make sex work disappear, by making it impossible to perform the job in a normal and safe way by criminalizing all third parties," according to the Belgian Union of Sex Workers (UTSOPI). "Those third parties are landlords, owners of rooms, bankers, lawyers, drivers…" Even employers were criminalized, "making it impossible to work legally in a brothel."
Decriminalized third parties might also include folks that have historically been referred to as "pimps" or "madams"—words carrying a lot of loaded implications but essentially referring to anyone who helps a sex worker find customers or otherwise manage their business.
Doing any of this in a violent, abusive, or coercive way is still a crime, of course. As UTSOPI notes: "If an accountant charges abnormally high fees to the sex worker for the sake of him or her being a sex worker, or if a third party demands sexual services in exchange for the delivery of services, then they are liable to prosecution."
A big part of what Belgium is doing now is trying to bring sex workers into "social protection" programs and employee benefits—things like unemployment compensation, maternity leave, and Belgium's version of Social Security.
The decriminalization law was a first step to making sex workers eligible for such things. The second step was the law the country passed at the beginning of May—the one that The Publica makes sound like a horrifying, dystopian mess. In fact, the measure had the support of the Belgian sex workers union.
Needless to say, Reason is generally critical of expansive welfare-state benefits—and of detailed labor regulations that invite the government to insert itself into workplace regulations. So nothing that I'm about to say is meant to suggest that there are no legitimate critiques of this new law. The point is to make it clear what the new legislation does, and why; any criticisms should proceed from the real law, not from fantasies.
The Right to Refuse
Under the decriminalized system, sex workers could be self-employed, and they could hire third parties to help them in various ways. They could also be freelance workers in an establishment run by someone else. But sex workers could not themselves be employees.
Under the new law, "sex workers will also be able to work under an employment contract, thus gaining access to social security: pension, unemployment, health insurance, family benefits, annual vacation, maternity leave," according to UTSOPI. "At the same time, the law ensures that sex workers in the workplace are protected against job-related risks and conditions are imposed on employers."
As part of this balance, the law imposes obligations on both businesses that employ sex workers and on sex workers who work for those businesses. One of the conditions on employees is that refusing sex acts more than 10 times in a six-month period allows an employer to request government mediation.
But the law also explicitly protects the right to refuse specific customers, sex acts, etc.
It stipulates that "every sex worker has the right to refuse a client," that "every sex worker has the right to refuse a sexual act," and that "every sex worker has the right to interrupt a sexual act at any time." It also says that "any sex worker has the right to perform a sexual act in the manner they wish" and that "if there are dangers to the sex worker's safety, the sex worker may refuse to sit behind a window or advertise."
If a sex worker invokes any of the five rights listed above, "the sex worker is protected from dismissal or other adverse action by the employer," notes UTSOPI.
Boundaries Go Both Ways
In reality, this law is explicitly drafted to stop prostitution businesses from punishing workers for exercising agency and setting boundaries. But employers must have some redress if the refusals are frequent enough to cause problems. Since firing or disciplining employees for exercising refusal rights is generally forbidden, this is where the mediation clause comes in.
"If a sex worker exercises the right to refuse more than ten times in a six-month period, the sex worker or the employer may seek the intervention of a governmental mediation service," according to UTSOPI. "That service will assess if there is anything wrong with the working conditions, if there is a problem in the employer-employee relationship. The service can also offer professional reorientation possibilities."
As you can see, saying that the new law allows "pimps to punish" sex workers for refusing sex acts is misleading. For starters, we're not talking individual "pimps" (a one-person sex work business cannot legally hire employees) but registered businesses that have contracted as a sex work employer and taken on all the responsibilities that entails.
One of the slogans of sex worker rights campaigners is sex work is work—it's a job, just like other jobs, and sex workers deserve the same dignitty and rights. But that has to go both ways. And employees of other jobs can't repeatedly refuse to do what they were hired to do without encountering at least some sort of intervention.
In this case, the "punishment" is merely having to try and work out a mutually agreed-upon solution. And either an employer or employee can trigger this mediation. A sex worker whose repeated refusal to accept customers or sex acts stems from broader issues with what their employer is expecting can themselves request mediation to try to work this issue out.
Or they can quit—without any sort of notice period required and without forfeiting their right to unemployment benefits.
Self-employed sex workers are obviously not subject to the mediation requirement here. Nor are those who work for someone else as non-employees (as independent contractors or freelancers or whatever you want to call it). But sex workers who are independent contractors are also not guaranteed job protection if they refuse.
Far from being some sort of crazy scheme that denigrates sex worker consent, the new labor law is designed to protect sex workers' autonomy and protect them from violence, exploitation, and privacy invasions, too.
Some of the employer obligations under the new law include a requirement that each room where sex acts take place be equipped with an alarm button and that sex worker unions and support groups be allowed to access sex workplaces. And sex workers can work under hospitality contracts that don't mention sex work.
Far from granting too much power to sex work employers, the new scheme seems, overall, to grant government too much say in the employer-employee relationship. The good news is that sex workers who want to work in such a system can, and sex workers who want to work outside such a system can. Under decriminalization (unlike legalization), staying out of the more managed system isn't against the law.
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..the new labor law is designed to protect sex workers' autonomy and protect them from violence,
No, it’s designed to encourage them to be an employee.
Yup. And their employer to be dependent on the state for ultimate (re)mediation. The whole article is a long "It's not happening and it's good that it is."
A nail in the coffin of the Gig(gity) Economy.
Getting fucked in both ends but only being paid for one.
“every sex worker has the right to interrupt a sexual act at any time.”
Ok, just so every John has a right to claim double damages under the Blue Balls Clause.
Sheesh! Authoritarian busybodies will try to regulate anything. Independent contractors are free to refuse to any job/contract they wish. Only employees have to justify everything to an authority figure. They can be independents and still be covered by the legal system & framework without hassle ... leave them be.
Leave them be?!? You probably hated California's AB 5 which saved Uber and Lyft drivers from the horror of being independent contractors at the mercy of every .... uh.... yeah.
How does that square with anti-discrimination law?
It is a clear violation.
Belgium may not have those like we do.
I'm starting to suspect ENB may be obsesses with whores and porn. Just a thought.
What, only now?
Bake that cake. Customers have a right to never be discriminated against based on the shape of their genitals, or which hole they want to use, probably.
So prostitutes are now public utilities (the only reason to discriminate is pay and safety)?
I don't think this is the victory enb thinks it is.
Also, I'll reiterate:
The best system of prostitution is in Australia, and if isn't a free market.
Needless to say, Reason is generally critical of expansive welfare-state benefits
[spit take]
Interesting that you need a law protecting sex workers after you decriminalize sex work. A + 2 != fish.
I also find it interesting that in an industry that continuously beats you around the head and shoulders, insisting that Sex werk is werk, said sex werkers need a special law that protects them from refusing to do their jobs, unlike a starbucks werker who can be fucking fired on the spot if a random stranger walks in the store and the starbucks werker just up and refuses to serve them.
One begins to think that sex werk finds itself in a rather unique space of werk and isn't quite just werk.
One also cannot help but wonder what the outcomes of the following situations would be:
Starbucks werker, sees black man enter store. “I’m not making coffee for your kind.
Sex Werker, sees black man enter sex werk establishment. “______ not __________ _______ _____ _______! And _____ you and the _______ _______ _______ ________!”
A is racist, B is exercising werker body autonomy.
Yeah,
Something tells me there aren't far-reaching laws throughout Belgium that broadly prevent other goods and service-based occupations from "calling it even".
By the way:
if a third party demands sexual services in exchange for the delivery of services, then they are liable to prosecution.
This reminds me of the covid-era laws that Britain was passing and promoted by the sex-werk-is-werk political cohort, making it illegal to ask for sex in lieu of rent.
It made no sense. If transacting in sex is categorically no different from any other remuneration (I lost my job so I’ll mow the lawn/do the dishes/fold the laundry/watch the kids/paint the bathroom/clean the pool/dig a new garden/wash the landrover/pressure wash the driveway/suck your dick in exchange for room and board) then why did they make that last category illegal. I know why they wanted it to be illegal, they know why they wanted it to be illegal, and frankly, I don’t really care, I just want them to quit screaming “sex werk is werk” in my face and admit that it’s not. Then we can agree to disagree on making sex werk 100% safe, legal and common with no downsides.
>sexual services in exchange for the delivery of services,
I thought this was the foundation of most marriages. Enforce this and society will break down, lawns will never be mowed. No man will ever again stand around the home depot and pretend he gives a shit whether the paint they buy is Off White, Chantilly Lace, Falling Snow, or Angel's kiss.
No Belgian waffling on this it seems.
This was ENB’s hotcake on the situation.
A stack of fapjacks.
Topped with butter and syrup!
🙂
😉
And hiow could I firget MST3K's tasty takes on Waffles:
Waffles and Live Meat
https://youtu.be/WOArkrjVoiw?si=Q1qEdoMBvdGKeMQI
🙂
😉
...
Then quirky meanings of "decriminalization" and "legalization" are in play. In general, decriminalization doesn't mean legalization, it just means abolition of criminal penalties, while the action can still be illegal and subject to civil penalties. Usually when they say something's being decriminalized, it's not to be made legal, just subject to lesser penalties. And in general legalization means making something no longer be illegal; the quoted statement seems to assume it comes with additional baggage that's not inherent in the word.
>A new labor law getting bad press is explicitly drafted to stop sex businesses from punishing workers who set boundaries.
Interesting way to phrase that.
Now, what if a construction worker 'sets boundaries' by refusing to do tasks within their job descriptions?
ENB, you want it both ways - where 'sex work is real work' but also where sex work doesn't have to abide by the norms of real work.
See my comment above. This is exactly "we want to be destigmatized and normalized, but made to feel special."
“we want to be destigmatized and normalized, but made to feel special.”
Yeah? Maybe this'll help.
I have a feeling this is not about a desire to feel special, but that in the absence of a law, sex employment contracts were completely unenforceable, and that this caveat was foisted on the industry as a condition of allowing enforcement of contracts at all.
in the absence of a law, sex employment contracts were completely unenforceable
In the absence of law (of man), all contracts are unenforceable. Either party can whimsically claim the contract was unfulfilled and/or renege without consequence.
The specific law was specifically passed to make sex employment distinct, as in special, relative to other employment and contracts. Which, again, we have all kinds of special employment and special contract, it's not a huge deal. The issue is the repeated, brain dead insistence that it's
not happening and it's good that it isnot a special exception and should be normalized."Belgium Protects Sex Work Employees' Right To Refuse Customers, Sex Acts."
Does that include the EU politicians and bureaucrats too?
Dignitty!
Do Christians there still have to bake the cake?
David Boaz says yes.
That's Reason's resident "Just
bake the cakesuck the dick" proponent?So, ENB is in favor of discrimination?