COSWAS has been campaigning for the decriminalization and legalization of the sex industry since the year 2000. After nearly a decade of campaigning, Article 80 of the “Public Order Maintenance Act”, which penalizes sex sellers, was amended in 2009. Based on “Action Research”, this paper examines the campaign process as a form of social inquiry. COSWAS and the author have been actively pushing for legal reform in favor of the sex workers, and challenging the government for the superficiality of its response right up to 2011. However, the Taiwan government has never intended to make any fundamental changes to the existing law; it just wants to be seen to respond to the debates by implementing a legal version that can by and large, satisfy popular opinion. This paper critically examines the actions and strategies of COSWAS and its failure and success.
COSWAS’ haste in rising to the legal challenge has resulted in grave implications. It had to back down on its demand of decriminalizing the sex sellers and buyers. COSWAS’ own weakness in organizing and its constituency not being ready to take on the herculean task are two of the reasons. The grassroots that COSWAS is organizing was not yet ready for such fundamental legal reforms. Thus, meaningful and successful legal reforms have to be built upon the strengthened subjectivity and agency of its constituency before the existing power relations can be subverted. The movement needs to confront the fundamental conflicts of interests within the sex industry. People’s ability in understanding and assessing the problem has to be enhanced before ideas and opinions can be changed and actions taken. When the campaign goals cannot be reached simultaneously, COSWAS had to resolve the dilemma and tension between holding onto its ideological position and breaking through the stalemate. This calls for critical self-examination. The team finally recognizes that its goal of legalizing the sex trade can only be achieved, if certain conditions are met. Based on rigorous fieldwork, COSWAS has come to the conclusion that for any effective legalization to take place, the campaign must be supported by organized grassroots sex workers in tandem with their de-stigmatization. Hence, COSWAS had to change its action goals and strategies during the campaign.
This paper highlights the following: the activists’ capacity and willingness to face up to the real needs of the movement and the movements’ strengths and weaknesses; what the movement can (or not) demand and what it should change (or not) at a given time, as well as the movement’s action choice and the consequences of its action.