Monique Prada is a Brazilian sex worker and activist fighting for an intersectional feminism that respects the agency of sex workers and incorporates their strife in its struggle for a more just society - she was even a member of the UN Women Civil Society Advisory Group. Like many other sex work activists, Prada aims to steer the discourse away from highly subjective moral questions to discuss pragmatic measures in order to improve the lives of and protect prostitutes: She is not here to dramatize or glamorize sex work, but she points out that it's a job frequently taken out of need, so to protect vulnerable people who would not choose sex work if they had a choice, measures like fighting poverty and improving social mobility could help change their destiny - the criminalization of sex work only makes it harder for them to survive (especially in countries without social security nets, obviously).
Prada also points out that the stigmatization of sex work is rooted in highly patriarchal thinking and rhetoric: That promiscuous sex ruins women, that honest women are married women - a rhetoric that serves to render trad wife marriages more appealing, because the alternative would mean to be some kind of failure and / or whore punished by society. And Prada does not fail to mention that marriages can (not must!) be a prostitution contract without a time limit, especially if there is severe monetary dependency and unilateral monogamy. So apart from pondering how society views sex workers, she also investigates what sex work says about society: The clients, she re-iterates, are mostly the husbands of these so-called honorable women. To exclude the sex worker from the feminist struggle, to declare them an anti-feminist agent in the business of pleasing men, means to enhance their marginalization and vulnerability. Rather, the whole structure of the sex industry and how it relates to society at large should be looked at for its inherent oppressions, so they can be fought.
The text is very engagingly written, it is illuminating and serves the important function to make the voices of those heard who are often turned into a objects of legislation, policing, and moral stigma, and frequently denied agency and respect by the same people who claim to want to protect them.