AINSW, an umbrella network of NGOs working for sex workers, has decided to constitute these boards which will comprise sex workers, social activists, doctors, legal experts and political leaders as members.
Bharati Dey, representing Kolkata-based NGO Durbar Mahila Samannya Committee which is part of AINSW, told PTI that "such a welfare board is essential in all the states to have a uniform system to look into the issue of trafficking and violence".
According to activist Smarjit Jana, the state police forces in the country have anti-trafficking cells which needs assistance to identify the issues of violence and trafficking, which is where the board fits in.
"Various programmes and schemes that have been developed by different government departments for the betterment of women, including sex workers, were ineffective because they were developed using a top-down approach which did not involve the community," Jana said.