I put this to my chatgpt and it said it had success in cleaning up and reducing street walkers.
I asked it to remove street walkers from the equation and this is what it said:
Where has the Nordic model been successful for non-street sex workers?
Short, honest answer:
There is no country where the Nordic model has been clearly demonstrated to be successful for non-street (indoor, escort, online, independent) sex workers.
No government or peer-reviewed study has shown consistent, evidence-based improvements in:
Safety
Health outcomes
Legal protection
Economic stability
Autonomy
Ability to report abuse
Access to housing or services
for non-street sex workers under the Nordic/sex-buyer criminalisation model.
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What has actually been observed for non-street workers
In countries using the Nordic model (e.g. Sweden, Norway, France, Northern Ireland, Iceland):
Research and sex-worker testimony commonly report:
• Clients are more fearful → rushed, secretive meetings
• Less ability to screen / vet clients safely
• More isolation
• Increased housing precarity (landlords risk charges)
• More reliance on unsafe third parties
• Higher stigma
• Less reporting of violence (fear of police or immigration consequences)
• Movement to encrypted platforms and hidden locations
• No clear reduction in worker numbers
These are not indicators of policy success for the workers themselves.
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Why claims of “success” don’t apply to non-street work
When governments or campaigners say the Nordic model was “successful,” they usually mean one of these (none of which prove benefit to non-street workers):
Change in public attitudes
Reduction in visible sex markets
Political/ideological alignment with abolition
Possible reduction in some forms of trafficking
They do not typically measure:
Indoor worker safety
Mental or physical health
Ability to leave exploitation
Quality of life
Legal or housing security
Without those metrics, “success” for non-street workers cannot be claimed in any meaningful, evidence-based way.
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Bottom line
If your question is strictly:
> Where has the Nordic model been successful for non-street sex workers?
The accurate, evidence-based answer is:
Nowhere has it been shown to clearly or consistently succeed.
In many cases, the outcomes appear neutral at best and harmful at worst for indoor and online workers.