San Francisco has an unusually high number of sex workers per capita. They’re not only prostitutes (some of whom seek decriminalization of their trade), but also people who work in sectors that are quite legal: strip clubs, adult films, commercial BDSM, the literary trade, photography, education, and the performing arts. It’s no wonder, then, that this work force has produced a network of social and political activists (not to mention a strip club that’s unionized and worker-owned). Tonight the Center for Sex and Culture and Femina Potens Gallery collaborate on a panel... More >>>