[url=tagv.mohw.gov.tw/TAGVResources/upload/Resources/2013/1/Rape,%20Prostitution%20and%20Consent.pdf]Rape, Prostitution and Consent[/url]
Indeed, evidence from the cases discussed above indicates that sex workers engage, as a matter of routine, in detailed stipulation with clients and others over the nature of the sex acts they will (and will not) engage in. So sex workers would appear to be more actively involved in communication about consent, and nonconsent, than most other adults involved in sexual activity (see Hickman and Muehlenhard 1999).3
However, historically, sex workers were seen by the law as women without this agency, as women who were always consenting and therefore, were incapable of being raped. There is now at least the possibility that sex workers will be seen in a court as fully human beings with the capacity to say ‘no’ (or ‘yes’) to sexual intercourse.
Prostitutes just as any woman are involved in choosing what they find acceptable/tolerable sexually and aren’t in a state of constant consent to anyone and everything.
Rather they are more sensibly concieved as in a state of nonconsent until otherwise.
Their consent is based on their
will as is anyones.
https://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/pdfs/For%20Ethical%20Politics.pdf#page90
-For Ethical Politics