<p>This book examines and theorizes about the emergence growth impact collapse and rejuvenation of a sex worker movement in India exploring the manner in which the two pandemics – HIV and COVID-19 – bookended a feminist movement through more than a quarter of a century shaping its trajectory over the course of that time.</p><p>Focusing on the sex workers’ collective Durbar Mahila Samanwaya Committee (DMSC) in Kolkata the book asks these questions: How did a sex workers’ collective rise from the margins of Indian society during the HIV pandemic to become the vanguard of a global sex work movement with half a million members and partner collectives stretching across the world? What were the strategies deployed by the collective to engage with the health social and political landscapes surrounding it? Moreover what were the factors that led to the splintering of a solidarity that had endured for a quarter of a century? Finally what does the DMSC story tell us about social movements that rise from the extreme margins of society in postcolonial contexts? Drawing on empirical research the author explores the conceptual and practice implications for the fields of social movement feminist public health and postcolonial political scholarship. The book suggests that activist public health social work and policy initiatives in poor women’s communities in postcolonial contexts need to be informed by the temporal community organizational institutional and affective markers that emerge in the research.</p><p>The first book to examine the DMSC sex work movement in India as a significant feminist movement of our times this book will be of interest to researchers from a wide range of disciplines including South Asian Studies Sociology Social Work Public Health Gender and Sexuality Studies and Political Science.</p>
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