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sex workers

Tuesday

Franziska Barczyk for NPR

The invisible lives — and deaths — of the children of sex workers

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Wednesday

Above: N., a sex worker at a bar in Pattaya, Thailand. The sex trade has offered good-paying jobs for many people from rural areas who were facing a life of tending rice paddies and digging up cassava roots. Allison Joyce for NPR hide caption

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Allison Joyce for NPR

Wednesday

The entrance to Herbertstrasse, the heart of the red-light district in Hamburg, Germany. Prostitution is legal in Germany, but the coronavirus pandemic prompted lawmakers to ban sex work in March. Rob Schmitz/NPR hide caption

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Rob Schmitz/NPR

Germany Bans Prostitution During Pandemic. Sex Workers Say That Creates New Dangers

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Thursday

Saturday

Siddharth Dube, a longtime public health advocate, has written a memoir: An Indefinite Sentence: A Personal History of Outlawed Love and Sex. Hindustan Times/Getty Images hide caption

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Hindustan Times/Getty Images

Monday

Catherine Healy, a former sex worker turned advocate is being made a dame by Queen Elizabeth II, for work championing the rights of those in the sex trade. Courtesy of Catherine Healy hide caption

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Courtesy of Catherine Healy

Friday

Sunday

Thursday

Protesters hold signs reading, "Prostitutes are angry. Don't touch our clients," during a protest Wednesday in Paris against legislation combating prostitution and sex trafficking. Thibault Camus/AP hide caption

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Thibault Camus/AP

Saturday

Tuesday

The Daulatdia brothel is the largest in Bangladesh, with more 2,000 prostitutes. Many arrived here after being kidnapped by gangs, sold by family members or lured with promises of good jobs. Lisa Wiltse/Corbis hide caption

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Lisa Wiltse/Corbis

Wednesday