Labor is described as an aggregate of all human mental and physical effort used to produce services or goods. Women have been an important part of the labor force in the world over the years. One of the major areas where women are overrepresented is in the service industry. Provision of service is connected with emotional relation between the client, and the service provider. Work can be either paid or unpaid. For instance, a waiter can serve tea at a hotel for pay or at home to her husband without pay. In both instances, labor is involved and it is either unpaid or paid for. Sex has been hotly debated subject, whether it can be classified as labor or not. Sex workers in many societies are stigmatized and criticized unjustifiably. Paid sex, however, can be a form of labor like any other work in the service industry, which involves emotional and physical connections between the sex worker and the client (Siouxsie, 2014). If those who criticize sex work as not being work look deeply into the technicalities of sex-for-pay and other forms of labor, they would understand that sex work is just like any other form of work, and has less harm to the sex worker than thought. Sex work can be very beneficial to women since it allows them to express their sexuality, as well as earn a living. Sex work is a career path that any woman should have a choice to follow. Sex Work as a Form of Labor Prostitution, as Hochschild's theory explains, can be seen as a form of labor that involves emotion as well as physical strength. Dunaway (2014) explains that sex work is a part of global commodity chain. It supplies sex services to the clients; hence, women's bodies are used as a commodity. Law or any other means should not prevent an adult who engages in paid sex willingly. This is because, like any other physical and emotional jobs such as nursing, an adult will engage in sex whether it is paid or unpaid. Sex has benefits to the client as well as to the sex worker. Sex helps reduce stress, offers a source of income and physical exercise among others. Commercial sex workers can be perceived to be beneficial to the larger economy, since they provide a basic need to clients-sexual satisfaction, which if missed, can lead to low productivity in other sectors of the economy. This is due to emotional stress that can result from unsatisfying sex life. Brents & Hausbeck (2001) note that the first step towards benefiting from the sex work is legalizing the profession. They further note that, legalizing prostitution in Nevada has offered valuable insight in how discrim