Safe Exit at Toynbee Hall, a partnership project based in London, features in the exhibition just opened at Museum in Docklands, Jack the Ripper and the East End.
Co-ordinator Ellen Armstrong, from Safe Exit, talks to visitors in an audio-visual in the exhibition on the parallels between the lives of local women involved in street prostitution in 1888 – the time of the Whitechapel Murders - and today.
More than 100 years after the time of Jack the Ripper, women are still driven into the trade for similar reasons, and are still tragically vulnerable to violence, rape and murder.
"In 1888 impoverished women were frequently addicted to gin and sold sex to earn the four pence needed to pay for lodgings for the night," say Safe Exit.
"Today as many as 95 per cent of women selling sex have a crack/heroin addiction, not unusually exceeding £100 a day, and often work to fund a boyfriend/partner's drug habit as well."