Understanding Exploitation in Consensual Sex Work to Inform Occupational Health & Safety Regulation

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https://mdpi.com/books/pdfview/book/4381Contributor(s)
Benoit, Cecilia M. (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
The impetus behind this Special Issue emerged from a quest to move beyondbinary thinking in the contemporary period about people who sell sexual services,including recent disputes about “sex trafficking vs. prostitution” and“criminalization vs. decriminalization”, to encourage theoretical and empiricalscholarship by exploring how sex work actually operates under different regulatoryregimes. The volume includes contributions from scholars of different socialsciences backgrounds based in five countries– New Zealand, the United Kingdom,Brazil, the United States and Canada. The article topics range widely,and both quantitative and qualitative research methods are showcased. The empiricalevidence presented adds to our current understanding of the complexityof this phenomenon of sex commerce/prostitution, which is found to be largelya problem of social inequality within and across capitalist societies. The authorscall for policies to address occupational and societal wide inequities faced by sexworkers across many countries.
Keywords
decriminalisation; employment; human rights; sex work; exploitation; money; agency; self-care; gender; transgender; subjectivity; end demand; violence; police; criminalization; indoor sex work; stigma; Canada; technology; mental health; job attributes; job insecurity; service work; hairstyling; governmentality; adolescents; anthropology; state; excuses; Amazon; consent; chemsex; MSW; men who have sex with men; MSM; qualitative; Grounded Theory; labour; vulnerability; objectification; feminism; sociology of labor; Rio de Janeiro; New Orleans; n/aWebshop link
https://mdpi.com/books/pdfview ...ISBN
9783036518626, 9783036518619Publisher website
www.mdpi.com/booksPublication date and place
Basel, Switzerland, 2021Classification
Humanities
Social interaction