«Decriminalise Our Lives!»

International Women's Day: Shared Vision for Feminism.

Statement by ESWA, EuroNPUD, S.A.F.E. and Equinox Initiative.

[I cannot agree more with it. ❤️‍🔥😍 💯]

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‣ Criminalisation should NEVER be the first response to social and healthcare issues!

3 years ago, the 8 March Principles were launched - to provide a new model on how we see justice.

This International Women's Day, we're calling for care over carceralism, on issues including sex work, abortion, harm reduction, racial justice and poverty.

We advocate for a feminism that is rights-based, not punitive.

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‣ Rights not rescue: sex work is work!

Criminalisation, including the criminalisation of clients, is a massive driver of violence against sex workers.

It drives sex work underground, into more danger and stigma, creates barriers to healthcare, housing, and justice.

The 8 March Principles emphasise that consensual sexual activity between adults should never be a matter for the criminal legal system.

Decriminalisation of sex work prioritises the safety, human and labour rights of sex workers.

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‣ Criminalisation has never stopped abortions from happening. It only makes them less safe.

Under the 8 March Principles, reproductive and bodily autonomy are recognised as fundamental human rights.

We demand the removal of all punitive barriers to healthcare. When we treat abortion as a crime, we violate the right to health, privacy, and bodily autonomy. It is time for a legal system that trusts individuals to make decisions about their own bodies without the threat of a prison cell.

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‣ Support, don't punish! Harm reduction saves lives. Criminalisation destroys them.

The “War on Drugs” is a war on all humans. In practice, it disproportionately impacts women, caregivers and communities already marginalised.

The 8 March Principles advocate for a shift from criminalisation to harm reduction. Drug use is a public health issue, not a criminal one. By redirecting resources from policing to community-supported healthcare and safe consumption services, we can transform our societies for the better.

Lived experience is knowledge.

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‣ Carceralism vs. Racial Justice.

The legal system isn't “neutral”.
It disproportionately targets and penalises Black, Brown and racialised communities.

The 8 March Principles remind us that justice cannot be achieved through a system built on systemic bias. We must dismantle the structures of over-policing and invest in safety measures that are led by and for the communities most affected by state violence.

Anti-carceral feminism is essential to realising racial justice.

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‣ The Shared Vision - Our Demands:

• Decriminalise abortion, sex work, drug use, and activities associated with poverty.

• Redirect resources from the carceral state to community-led safety, health, and housing.

• Adopt the 8 March Principles globally to ensure that human rights, not moral policing, guide our legal systems.

• Center lived experience as expertise: policies are stronger when shaped by the people most affected. Amplify community voices, recognise peer support, and treat people with dignity and autonomy.

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‣ Poverty is not a crime!

In many places, being poor or homeless is effectively treated as a criminal offense.
Laws targeting activities like loitering or sleeping in public punish people for simply existing.

The 8 March Principles state that the criminal law should never be used to address social and economic exclusion.
We cannot jail our way out of poverty, and should never criminalise the means by which the poorest survive.

Resources belong in housing and healthcare, not policing and prisons.

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‣ Further reading:

🌐 S.A.F.E. https://supportingabortions.eu

🌐 EuroNPUD: https://euronpud.net
➕ SisterWUD: https://euronpud.net/project/mobilising-women-who-use-drugs-and-combating-gender-based-violence-gbv/

🌐 European Sex Workers' Rights Alliance: https://www.eswalliance.org

🌐 Equinox Initiative for Racial Justice: https://equinox-eu.com

🗄📄 8 March Principles: https://web.archive.org/web/20230311063011/https://icj2.wpenginepowered.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/8-MARCH-Principles-FINAL-printer-version-1-MARCH-2023.pdf

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A safer world is possible when we stop using the law to punish and start using it to protect.

When we remove the threat of criminalisation, we create space for autonomy, safety, and dignity for all.
It also makes space for well-being and pleasure: safer choices, informed decisions, and self-determination.

‣ LET'S BUILD A FEMINISM THAT LIBERATES EVERYONE, SPECIALLY THE MOST MARGINALISED.

#8M #M8 #IWD #InternationalWomensDay #Europe #ESWA #SAFE #EuroNPUD #EquinoxInitiative #SexWork #HarmReduction #SRHR #Abortion #DrugUse #Decrim #DecrimNow #Decriminalization #Feminisms

🕯️ On This Day in LGBTQ+ History: February 15 ⚠️ February 15, 2014: India’s re criminalization of same sex relations continues to take effect See Full Post: www.linkedin.com/posts/therai... #LGBTQHistory #Decriminalization #HumanRights #LGBTQIndia
🕯️ On This Day in LGBTQ+ History: February 14 ⚠️ February 14, 2019: Kenya’s High Court hearing highlights continued criminalization under colonial era sodomy laws... See Full Document: www.linkedin.com/posts/therai... #LGBTQHistory #HumanRights #Decriminalization #LGBTQKenya

#lgbtqhistory #humanrights #de...
#lgbtqhistory #humanrights #decriminalization #lgbtqkenya | Malcolm Montgomery🏳️‍🌈

🕯️ On This Day in LGBTQ+ History: February 14 ⚠️ February 14, 2019: Kenya’s High Court hearing highlights continued criminalization under colonial era sodomy laws By February 14, 2019, Kenya’s High Court had completed hearings in a landmark case challenging Sections 162 and 165 of the Penal Code, which criminalized consensual same sex intimacy. As deliberations moved forward, it was clear that millions of LGBTQ Kenyans remained vulnerable under laws that carried prison sentences of up to fourteen years. Although the final ruling would come later in the year, mid February marked a moment when the weight of potential legal rejection loomed heavily over the community. At this moment in history: 🕯️LGBTQ Kenyans faced ongoing risk of arrest, harassment, and police abuse 🕯️Community members reported blackmail and extortion linked to criminalization 🕯️Health outreach efforts were hindered by fear and stigma 🕯️Public hostility intensified as political leaders defended the law February 14 serves as a context date marking a period when the possibility of decriminalization hung in uncertainty, underscoring how legal systems can sustain vulnerability even amid reform efforts. The continued enforcement of these laws represented a broader global pattern in which colonial era statutes remained tools of discrimination. Who continues to defend equality Locally, organizations such as the National Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission and GALCK Kenya led legal advocacy, community support, and public education campaigns. Regionally and globally, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, ILGA World, and the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights monitored proceedings and amplified calls for reform. These groups continue to work toward decriminalization and protection of LGBTQ dignity and safety. #LGBTQHistory #HumanRights #Decriminalization #LGBTQKenya

Decriminalization worked. B.C. killed it

https://youtube.com/shorts/tpBNVROn6Ag?si=9B35OxTyA7H7AkDZ

> B.C. cancelled its drug decriminalization pilot, saying it hadn’t “delivered the results” they wanted.Its results: fewer drug users arrested and traumatized ...

#drugs #opioidcrisis #opioid #britishcolumbia #BC #canadapolitics #decriminalization #thebreach #toxicdrugepidemic

For example, the [former] Chief of Police in #Köln (#Cologne) advocated for abolishing #NonviolentDrugOffenses from criminal code (namely, minor amounts of #Cannabis [#Weed and #Hash]) because the mandate to press charges got police officers to waste time reporting #drug #users / #consumers, knowing any minor amount [ <20g ] would get tossed by prosecutors entirely and even at repeat offenders only result in a fine.

  • Which is #PersonnelHours wasted to actually work on real #crime (and i.e. go after burglars, carjackers, and armed robbers) than 'busting' that same person self-medicating because they can't afford prescription weed at moonrock prices nor find a doctor to prescribe.

(This was in the late 2010s BTW!)

Personally, I'd want to see the "#PortugueseModel" of #decriminalization and #care towards #DrugUsers and #addicts because the only way to exercise #PublicHealth, #YouthProtection and #ConsumerProtection standards is by having a "bright field" where #regulation is possible.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AR3Ynx0s8gE&t=371s

Why The War on Drugs Is a Huge Failure

YouTube
'It wasn't working': #Canada province ends #drug #decriminalization
"BC's experience mirrors tt in US state of #Oregon which #rolledback its drug decriminalizatn prog in 2024 aft a 4-year trial.. A flashpoint moment in BC was a 2024 incident where a person was filmed smoking a narcotic inside Tim Hortons, popular coffee chain frequented by families.. Local politicians attributed te incident to a #permissiveness abt #drugs ushered in by decriminalization"
Don't try drugs✋️
https://www.bangkokpost.com/world/3187903/it-wasnt-working-canada-province-ends-drug-decriminalization

Populism Pushes Republican Ahead - Steve Hilton and Triggernometry

#decarceration #decriminalization #crime #california #politics

First Nations leaders criticize B.C. for dropping drug decriminalization project
The Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs says it's worried about impacts on First Nations people as the province discontinues its drug decriminalization project. It says the province failed to support the project by not investing in other models of care.
#drugs #decriminalization #government #BC
https://www.cbc.ca/news/indigenous/first-nations-drug-decriminalization-dropped-9.7051897?cmp=rss
First Nations leaders criticize B.C. for dropping drug decriminalization project
The Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs says it's worried about impacts on First Nations people as the province discontinues its drug decriminalization project. It says the province failed to support the project by not investing in other models of care.
#drugs #decriminalization #government #BC
https://www.cbc.ca/news/indigenous/first-nations-drug-decriminalization-dropped-9.7051897?cmp=rss

The Union of BC Indian Chiefs speaks out on the decision not to ask for an extension of the exemption from criminal prosecution for possession of small amounts of illicit drugs. The UBCIC says it is "deeply disappointed with B.C.’s decision to end decriminalization pilot and calls for return to a public health approach."

#decriminalization #addiction #mentalhealth #bcpoli

https://www.ubcic.bc.ca/ubcic_deeply_disappointed_with_bc_decision_to_end_decriminalization_pilot