Taking small steps: Sensitising the police through male sex workers’ community-led advocacy in Nairobi, Kenya

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Kenyan sex worker-led organisations (SWLOs) often play a key role in the national HIV response. Accounts of these organisations frequently focus on their community-led approaches to promote sexual health. This paper addresses sensitisation, an underexplored but significant activity in the political agency of sex workers (SWs). Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in a male SWLO in Nairobi, we examine how male SWs strategically use their position in the national HIV response to create spaces of police sensitisation. Taking police sensitisation as a manifestation of community-led advocacy and a ‘politics of small steps’, we examine how SWs respond to, resist and remake the political landscape of police violence. The strategy supports SWs in changing existing power relationships between themselves and the police, albeit within the confines of a criminalising legal system. The analysis of sensitisation practices supports a reimagining of SWLOs that stresses their political agency in the production of new political spaces and expands the focus on African SWLOs beyond HIV work to their political activities, which advance SWs’ health, rights and social justice.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2316-2328
Number of pages13
JournalGlobal public health
Volume17
Issue number10
Early online date18 Jul 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

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