Our Approach
NEASE exists to eliminate all forms of sexual exploitation. We advance the Equality Model, which holds exploiters accountable, decriminalizes those who are bought and sold, and invests in support services and prevention. Our commitment is justice-oriented, trauma-sensitive, and grounded in research and survivor insight.
Our Goals
Policy Positions
Reduce demand by holding buyers and profiteers accountable.
Strengthen reintegration services—housing, healthcare, education, and employment pathways.
Elevate community education to prevent grooming and exploitation.
Influence policy locally and nationally in partnership with stakeholders.
Equality Model adoption with clear buyer penalties and expungement pathways for the exploited.
No full legalization of prostitution; evidence shows increased harm and spread into otherwise protected communities.
Investment in survivor-led services, exit supports, and trauma-informed systems.
Technology accountability for facilitation and profiteering from exploitation.
Decriminalizing the ENTIRE sex trade —>
More sex trafficking
Here’s Why:
Once you normalize the sex trade, it explodes.
In Germany, where prostitution and brothels have been legal since 2002, an estimated one million men buy sex each day, coming from all over the world. The capital city, Berlin, alone has over 500 brothels.
Men who don’t buy sex when it is illegal, become new clients.
As a 2018 study of 8,000 U.S. men demonstrates, over 20% of respondents who never bought sex, would buy sex if it was decriminalized or legalized.
To satisfy demand, the sex trade has to lure vulnerable people.
There are never enough women willing to be exploited and degraded in prostitution. Sex trafficking cases increased 70% in Germany as a result of legalization. In The Netherlands were prostitution was legalized in 2000, an estimated 50-90% of women are being sold against their will.
The illegal sex trade increases alongside the legal sector, when it is normalized.
Nevada, the only U.S. jurisdiction with legal brothels, has the highest rates of an illegal sex trade—63% higher than the next highest state of New York and double that of Florida.
Why Trauma-Sensitive?
Language and visuals should inform without sensationalizing. We avoid imagery that identifies survivors or reproduces harm. We focus on facts, dignity, and informed action.