1. Competition paper. Prostitution and public health in New South Wales
- Author
-
John Scott
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Scrutiny ,Corporate governance ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Subject (philosophy) ,Criminology ,Power (social and political) ,Competition (economics) ,medicine ,Sanctions ,Sociology ,Criminal justice - Abstract
Using historical and contemporary resources, this paper provides a critical account of the contemporary governance of prostitution in New South Wales. A Foucauldian approach is used to analyse the ways in which prostitution has been problematized as a health issue and managed as a public health problem. The analysis differs from other critical studies of prostitution in that it examines specific techniques of power, the operations of which have not been confined to the workings of a repressive criminal justice system. It is shown that there currently co-exists two broad understandings of prostitution in New South Wales, Australia, which have informed current initiatives to manage prostitution. Prostitutes working in public spaces have been presented as sexual agents wilfully engaged in criminal conduct and the spread of contagion. They have been subject to intense official scrutiny and regulated through criminal sanctions. In contrast, prostitutes working in private spaces have been presented as victims o...
- Published
- 2003