[2] Since its establishment, RedTraSex, aims to achieve nation state recognition for its members demanding that they be protected as legitimate workers and have access to adequate health services, work and social benefits.
It aims to strengthen unity amongst its members through communication platforms, awareness campaigns, supporting community-based organizations, and publishing research on issues faced by sex workers.
Feminist scholars Kate Hardy and Megan Rivers-Moore suggest that the current movement for sex worker unionization in Latin America is directly linked to RedTraSex.
RedTraSex also organizes workshops on governance, human rights, gender, and self-esteem to help members gain international exposure, share ideas, identify commonalities, and work towards achieving autonomy in unionization.
In 2007, members set up booths and presented their report "Un Movimiento de Tacones Altos: Mujeres Trabajadoras Sexuales y Activistas" at the Fourth Forum of HIV & AIDS in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Additionally, the organization offers informative training sessions for police cohorts to raise awareness about the infringement of rights and abuse of power that sex workers often face.