QSTPS & GROK - COUNTRIES/REGIONS WHERE SEX WORK IS ALLOWED, TOLERATED, OR NOT FULLY CRIMINALIZED FORM THE GLOBAL MAJORITY -JEFFREY EPSTEIN GHISLAINE MAXWELL, R KELLY & SEAN PUFF DADDY DID SEX/LOVE WORK WHERE IT IS ILLEGAL HENCE THE FURORE - SEX WORK OR LOVE WORK SHOULD BE LEGALIZED

 

 

 

 JEFFREY EPSTEIN  GHISLAINE MAXWELL, R KELLY & SEAN PUFF DADDY  DID SEX/LOVE WORK WHERE IT IS ILLEGAL HENCE THE FURORE - SEX WORK OR LOVE WORK SHOULD BE LEGALIZED - u


USA is the greatest capital of Sex'Love Art and it is sad that it ironically arrests and imprisons those who engage in the trade yet it is the greatest and best exporter of Sex/Love Material. America should reconsider its position on making Love Work a crime hence decriminalize Sex Work.


QSTPS Comments

 

 

1. Countries where sex work (prostitution) is allowed, tolerated, or not fully criminalized (selling sex is legal or decriminalized, often with limits on brothels, pimping, solicitation, or buying). This includes Legal, Limited Legality, Abolitionism, and Decriminalization models.

According to 2026 data, this group covers roughly 39 fully legal + 69 limited legality countries (plus variations), making it the majority globally when including tolerated or partially regulated systems.

Examples (selected prominent ones, numbered; full lists are extensive and vary by source):

  1. Germany — Fully legal and regulated (brothels, licensing).
  2. Netherlands — Legal and regulated.
  3. Belgium — Decriminalized.
  4. New Zealand — Fully decriminalized.
  5. Switzerland — Legal and regulated.
  6. Austria — Legal.
  7. Greece — Legal.
  8. Australia (varies by state) — Legal in many areas.
  9. Brazil — Legal (abolitionist model).
  10. Colombia — Legal.
  11. Argentina — Legal.
  12. Peru — Legal.
  13. Ecuador — Legal.
  14. Uruguay — Legal.
  15. Mexico (varies by region) — Legal in many areas.
  16. Turkey — Legal.
  17. Bangladesh — Legal with restrictions.
  18. India — Limited legality (private is often tolerated).
  19. Japan — Limited (certain acts).
  20. United Kingdom — Limited legality (selling tolerated with restrictions).
  21. France — Selling legal, buying illegal (neo-abolitionist).
  22. Canada — Selling legal, buying illegal.
  23. Denmark — Legal.
  24. Czechia (Czech Republic) — Legal.
  25. Hungary — Legal.
  26. Latvia — Legal.
  27. Portugal — Legal.
  28. Italy — Legal (abolitionist).
  29. Spain — Limited legality.
  30. Costa Rica — Legal (brothels restricted).
  31. Panama — Legal.
  32. Kenya — Legal (abolitionist).
  33. Senegal — Regulated in some contexts.
  34. Lebanon — Legal.
  35. Indonesia — Limited legality.

Many more countries in South America, parts of Africa, and Europe fall here (e.g., Chile, Bolivia, Mozambique, Eritrea, etc.). Tolerance often exceeds strict legality in practice.

2. Countries where sex work is criminalized (full prohibitionism: selling, buying, and/or organizing are illegal, with active bans).

This is the smaller group overall, though common in parts of Asia, the Middle East, Africa, and some other regions. Roughly 50–60+ depending on strict definitions and enforcement.

Examples (selected):

  1. China
  2. Pakistan
  3. Russia
  4. Egypt
  5. Philippines
  6. Vietnam
  7. Iran
  8. Saudi Arabia
  9. United Arab Emirates
  10. Afghanistan
  11. Thailand (illegal but widely tolerated)
  12. South Africa
  13. Uganda
  14. Morocco
  15. Nigeria (varies)
  16. South Korea
  17. Iraq
  18. Yemen
  19. North Korea
  20. Syria
  21. Cambodia
  22. Zimbabwe
  23. Rwanda
  24. Tunisia
  25. United States (illegal except limited counties in Nevada)

Majority conclusion: Countries/regions where sex work is allowed, tolerated, or not fully criminalized form the global majority (especially when including limited legality and abolitionist models where selling itself is not punished). Full criminalization is more common in certain conservative or authoritarian contexts but does not represent most UN member states.

Important notes:

  • Laws are complex and often distinguish between selling sex, buying, brothels, pimping, and street work. Enforcement varies hugely from de facto tolerance to harsh punishment.
  • Data is from 2026 sources and can change; always verify current local laws for travel or other purposes.

Let me know if you want more details on a specific country or region.

 

 

written by Grok & Founder of QSTPS
Arthur Owiti/ Tendaishe Owiti/Arthur Tendaishe Ochieng Mburu Owiti / Ochieng/Mburu/Owiti / Rex Arthur / Aquarian Scientist/Aquarian Philosopher/DJ Kuchu/Tendaishe Owiti Mungu Eloah 

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