5,404 results on '"SEX industry"'
Search Results
2. Weighing Down My Career? An Exploration of the Mechanisms for Body Fat’s Impact on Long-Term Career Success and the Moderating Role of Employee Sex and Industry.
- Author
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Johnson, Michael A., Priesemuth, Manuela, and Moreno, Francisco
- Subjects
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FAT , *INDUSTRIAL hygiene , *OCCUPATIONAL achievement , *OVERWEIGHT women , *SEX industry - Abstract
Much of the worldwide population is obese or overweight. However, the effects of body fat on a person’s workplace success, especially in the long term, are not well known. Further, we have little insight on the dominant mechanisms by which body fat influences career outcomes. Aiming to understand if, how, and when employee body fat impacts career success over time, we challenge prior theory (i.e. stigma theory) and employ a novel medical perspective to suggest that an employee’s health – in the form of illnesses like cardiovascular disease and diabetes – determines the relationship between employee body fat levels and long-term work success. Furthermore, we integrate research from evolutionary biology to consider the moderating role of employee sex in the health process and probe effects by industry. Longitudinal results from a nationally representative, multi-wave sample (across 20 years) show that employee health – but not stigmatization or other explanations – mediates the negative relationship between employee body fat levels and career success. Moreover, findings reveal that employee sex does not moderate this indirect effect, indicating that high body fat men and women equally experience adverse career effects due to the serious medical impairments they incur. Industry further qualifies these effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Upmarket boudoirs and red lights: the physical environment of sex workplaces in New Zealand.
- Author
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Easterbrook-Smith, Gwyn and Weinhold, Claire
- Subjects
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WORKPLACE romance , *SEX industry , *CRITICAL discourse analysis , *SEX work , *DISCOURSE analysis , *BROTHELS - Abstract
The physical environment and location of brothels has been the focus of significant scholarship, although much of the literature focuses on the exterior of these businesses, leaving the interiors as yet under-examined. In New Zealand, there is a tension between decriminalization’s intention that brothels are treated similarly to other businesses, and the enduring stigma which sex work is subject to. To mitigate stigmatization and public condemnation of their businesses, brothel owners sometimes mimic the aesthetic and branding of more mainstream industries. Drawing on data from media texts and interviews with brothel owners and operators, this article examines how ‘mainstreaming’ narratives of respectability and acceptability are produced in the physical space of brothels, particularly their interior décor and design. Media texts were analysed using a critical discourse analysis approach, and interviews using a Foucauldian discourse analysis model, allowing for an understanding of the interplay between the discursive production of the brothel sector and the physical environment of these businesses. We suggest that brothels’ interiors are used as a way of indexing their class status, and explore how this may be used to communicate ideas about the workers employed there, particularly in relation to existing stigmas about prostitution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Porn or Partner Arousal? When It Comes to Romantic Relationships, Not All Sexual Arousal Is Equal: A Prospective Study.
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Lawless, Nicholas J. and Karantzas, Gery C.
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SEXUAL excitement , *PORNOGRAPHY , *RELATIONSHIP quality , *AROUSAL (Physiology) , *SEX industry - Abstract
Little is known about the role of subjective sexual arousal within romantic relationships. The current paper addresses this limitation using a prospective study design that investigates the direct associations between subjective sexual arousal induced by a romantic partner (partner arousal) and arousal induced by pornography (porn arousal) on changes in relational outcomes. A total of 309 participants who were in a current romantic relationship completed measures of partner and porn arousal as well as relational outcomes (i.e., sexual satisfaction and relationship quality and stability) at baseline (T1) and completed a second assessment of relational outcomes 2 months later (T2). Partner arousal was found to have no significant associations with changes in relational outcomes; however, porn arousal was associated with significant declines in sexual satisfaction and relationship quality and stability over a 2-month period. This paper is the first to examine how feeling sexually aroused by porn may impact relational outcomes for those in romantic relationships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Pornographic Video Consumption and Partner Preference Among Chinese Male Sexual Minorities: The Moderating Role of Perceived Realism.
- Author
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Xu, Jiatong, Wright, Paul J., Su, Yanchen, Liu, Yue, and Zheng, Lijun
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PORNOGRAPHY , *SEXUAL minorities , *SEXUAL orientation , *SEX industry , *REALISM - Abstract
A growing body of research documents that the use of pornography is becoming more frequent among male sexual minorities. According to the sexual script acquisition, activation, application model of mediated sexual socialization (3AM), pornography can be considered a potential factor influencing an individual's partner preference. In addition, perceived realism could moderate the link between pornography consumption and partner preferences. This study explored the relationship between pornographic video consumption and partner preference among male sexual minorities and the moderating role of perceived realism. A total of 595 male sexual minorities aged 18 to 47 years (M = 21.70, SD = 3.83), including 82.9% gay men and 17.1% bisexual men, were enrolled in the study. Our results revealed the following: (1) The frequency of pornographic video consumption and male sexual minorities' preferences for appearance and sexual ability in partner selection were positively correlated (r =.06/.07, ps <.05). (2) When perceived realism was low, pornographic video consumption was not significantly associated with appearance and sexual ability preference. (3) Conversely, when perceived realism was high, pornographic video consumption was positively associated with appearance and sexual ability preference (β =.17/.16, ps <.01). Findings highlight the mechanisms behind pornographic video consumption and partner preference in sexual minority males. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Madams in Sex Business in Spain: Receptionists, Managers, or Pimps?
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Meneses-Falcón, Carmen and Tellería-Pérez, Rosa
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WORKPLACE romance , *EUROPEAN literature , *SEX industry , *QUALITATIVE research , *HUMAN trafficking - Abstract
The Spanish pay for sex scene has varied significantly in the last decades and most of the European literature has focused on the active role of women in human trafficking networks. However, there is scarce research examining the stories of women holding managerial positions in the pay for sex organizations in the South of Europe. By questioning the often binarized perceptions of the madams, this study aims to demonstrate the distinct roles that female decision-makers in the brothels can occupy. Data comes from two samples of business owners and traffickers. Research methods include qualitative techniques such as in-depth interviews, informal interviews and ethnographic observations. By combining the analyzed data with the previous literature, a Mediterranean model of madams is proposed. Results show the need for more critical research analyzing the experiences of women with significant roles in the Southern European sex market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Reproductive healthcare utilization for women in the sex trade: a qualitative study.
- Author
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Birger, Lior, Benyamini, Yael, Goor, Yael, Sahar, Zohar, and Peled, Einat
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WOMEN'S health services ,SEX trafficking ,SEX work ,MEDICAL personnel ,TRAUMA-informed care - Abstract
Background: Women in the sex trade encounter significant challenges in obtaining reproductive healthcare. Reports of reproductive healthcare for women in the sex trade center on the prevention and termination of pregnancies, yet most women in the sex trade globally experience full term pregnancies and bear children. This study aimed to explore barriers and enabling factors to providing reproductive healthcare for women in the sex trade in Israel. Methods: We conducted a qualitative study utilizing a grounded theory method. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews, conducted between June 2021 and July 2022. Interviews were conducted with practitioners in healthcare settings (n = 20), practitioners in social services settings (n = 15), and women in the sex trade who received reproductive health care-related medical services (n = 13) in Israel. The interviews were audiotaped, transcribed, and thematically analyzed. Results: The findings indicated a multilayered structure of healthcare system-related factors and women-related factors. Stigma was noted as a multidimensional barrier, reflected in service providers' attitude towards women in the sex trade, impairing the patient-provider relationship and impeding women's help-seeking. However, the creation of a relationship of trust between the women and healthcare providers enabled better health outcomes. Conclusions: Based on the findings, we propose recommendations for designing and implementing reproductive healthcare services for women in the sex trade. The recommendations offer to (a) include women with lived experiences in planning and providing reproductive healthcare services, (b) adopt a trauma-informed approach, (c) emphasize nonjudgmental care, (d) train healthcare providers to reduce stigma and bias, and (e) enhance the affordability of health services for women experiencing marginalization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Ageing/body/sex/work – Migrant women's narratives of intimacy and ageing in commercial sex and elder care work.
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Näre, Lena and Diatlova, Anastasia
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SEX work , *SEX workers , *ELDER care , *ETHNOLOGY research , *SEX industry - Abstract
This article analyses how sex and elder-care workers negotiate intimacy and ageing in their work. We find surprising similarities between sex and care work that derive from the ways in which Eastern European migrant women are sexualised in the sites of our studies: Italy and Finland. The bodywork and intimate labour conducted by the women is defined in part by the social status of their work in society, in part by the ageing bodies upon whom the work is done, and in part by the ways in which the bodies of the workers are gendered, sexualised and racialised. The article draws on interview and participant observation data collected during two ethnographic research projects with female migrants from post-socialist countries working as eldercare workers in Italy and in sex workers in Finland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. The Sex Wars: Prostitution, Carceral Feminists, and the Consolidation of Police Power.
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Pliley, Jessica R.
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POLICE power , *POLICE harassment , *POLICE , *COMMUNITY policing , *SEX industry - Abstract
Anne Gray Fischer's The Streets Belong to Us makes an important contribution to the growing historiography of post-1970's feminism in the United States. Her final chapter deftly explores the rise of what she calls "dominance feminists" who allied with police departments in their campaigns against commercial sex. However, this alliance overlooked the realities of on-the-ground policing and exacerbated the marginalization of Black women. Fischer's analysis underscores the importance of centering Black women's experiences and engaging with communities impacted by police harassment to inform more inclusive and effective feminist strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. What's good for the gander is even better for the goose: Women buying commercial sex in China.
- Author
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Tsang, Eileen Y. H.
- Subjects
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WOMEN'S empowerment , *HUMAN sexuality , *SOCIAL norms , *SEX industry , *SEX workers , *WOMEN'S sexual behavior - Abstract
Research about the commercial sex industry rarely examines the women who are the clients purchasing sexual services. Examining how this challenges gender stereotypes through the undoing gender framework reveals how gender norms can be reshaped through contextual changes. Based on 3 years of ethnographic data from a high‐end bar in Tianjin, interviews with 27 female clients and 47 MSWs paint a complex picture of how some women adopted ungendered strategies regarding sexuality. As women take control of their own sexual behavior, they free themselves of some traditional societal expectations about their identity. Primarily motivated by pleasure and control, purchasing sex becomes a means for women to experience empowerment and self‐confidence by breaking with traditional gender norms and expectations. Undoing gender involves expanding gendered repertoires, with women finding empowerment in adopting a masculine model of sexuality. However, social stigma and personal efficacy indicate that gender deconstruction is a gradual process. The research contributes to understanding complex gender dynamics and sexual behaviors within commercial sex transactions, shedding light on societal norms and individual agency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Navigating Stigma in Romantic Relationships Where One or Both Partners Sell Sexual Services.
- Author
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Benoit, Cecilia, Koenig, Brett, Mellor, Andrea, Jansson, Mikael, Magnuson, Doug, and Vetrone, Laura
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INTERPERSONAL attraction , *SOCIAL stigma , *SEX workers , *JOB stress , *SEX industry - Abstract
Romantic relationships are an important part of our social identities and well-being. In this paper, we report on qualitative findings with thirty Canadian couples, interviewed together, where it was known that one or both partners sell sexual services for a living. We asked a series of open-ended questions related to the background of the couple's relationship, their day-to-day interactions and work-related stressors. Participants talked about the ongoing negotiations they engage in as a couple, the benefits of being open to each other about working in the sex industry, and how they manage its emotional toll on their partnership. We conclude that there are various ways that sex workers are able to maintain intimacy in their romantic relationships after sex work has been disclosed. Widespread social stigma attached to sex work, complicated by criminalization in countries such as Canada, nevertheless threatens relationship quality in the long run. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. "I Was Worshiped and in Control": Sugar Arrangements Involving Transactional Sex from the Perspective of Both Sugar Babies and Sugar Benefactors.
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Metcalfe, Kate B., Cormier, Lauren A., Lacroix, Pascale J., and O'Sullivan, Lucia F.
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TRANSACTIONAL sex , *SEX industry , *SEX workers , *SOCIAL media , *ATTITUDES toward sex - Abstract
Sugar dating arrangements involve an older partner ("sugar daddy/mommy") who provides financial support to a younger partner ("sugar baby") in exchange for intimacy. The current study recruited a U.S. and Canadian sample of sugar babies (n = 45) and sugar benefactors (n = 32) through social media sources to survey them about perceived power in their sugar arrangement, gender roles, and stigma. Sugar benefactors did not differ in perceived power from sugar babies, nor in endorsement of traditional gender roles or stigma. Directed content analysis analyzing open-ended responses about associated outcomes indicated that both partners placed strong emphasis on companionship despite the importance of sex within arrangements. Sugar babies reported that money drives participation, although arrangements fulfill other needs, such as pleasure. Other benefits include having an arrangement with clear boundaries and expectations. Disadvantages include concerns for safety, that being physical safety for babies, and reputation and being used for money for daddies. Notably, both groups perceived sugar babies as having equal or more power than sugar benefactors, although this was often attributed to sugar babies' attractiveness and youth. Findings include insights from both babies and benefactors, and support perspectives that sugar dating is distinct from traditional sex work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Initial Validity Evidence for a Measure of Transactional Sex in a U.S. College Student Sample.
- Author
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Temple, Jasmine, Ferretti, Morgan L., Reis-Bergan, Monica, and Irons, Jessica G.
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TRANSACTIONAL sex , *SEX workers , *ATTITUDES toward sex , *SEX industry , *COLLEGE students - Abstract
The current study provides initial validity evidence for a measure of Transactional Sex (TS). Participants (N = 269) were recruited from a Northeastern University in the United States and consisted of undergraduate and graduate students. Participants completed an online survey through QuestionPro that contained the Transactional Sex Measure (TSM) as well as measures of depression, anxiety, and stress, condom use negotiation self-efficacy and sexual risk, alcohol and drug use, and materialism. Construct and criterion validity were examined. Findings revealed that the TSM provided good criterion validity evidence but the construct validity evidence was minimal. Further studies on the conceptualization of TS and distribution of the TSM across a variety of diverse samples can provide more validity evidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. The Role of Moral Foundations in Support for Sex Work Decriminalization by Venue.
- Author
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Cole, Katrina
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SEXUAL ethics , *SEX workers , *SEX industry , *SOCIAL policy , *CRIMINAL law - Abstract
The criminal status of prostitution has received greater attention from policymakers and advocates in recent years, but systematic policy change has yet to take root in the United States. These efforts have been both motivated and challenged by a strong moral discourse, resulting in policies that are more reflective of ideology than efficacy. While the popularization of sex work through online avenues like social media has altered the traditional concept of sex work, there is an incomplete understanding of public attitudes toward decriminalization in this modern market. Using national data from 519 U.S. adults, the present study applied Moral Foundations Theory to investigate support for sex work decriminalization in three venues (brothel, online, street). Overall, results show lower support for decriminalization of street sex work compared to brothel and online sex work, and that the effects of moral foundations on support for decriminalization are consistent across all venues. Individualizing foundations (i.e. harm, fairness) do not predict support for decriminalization, while binding and liberty foundations explain some variation in support. Implications of the findings speak to the potential barriers to criminal justice reform in this area and the role of moral arguments in this dispute. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Constructing Identity Through Sex-Consumption: The Consumerist Narratives of Israeli Men Who Pay Women for Sex.
- Author
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Prior, Ayelet and Peled, Einat
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ATTITUDES toward sex , *SEX industry , *SEX workers , *CONSUMERISM , *DATA analysis - Abstract
This study examined how consumerism shapes the identity construction processes of Israeli men who pay women for sex (MPWS). Using the theoretical framework of symbolic interaction and the theoretical concept of extended self, we explored how Israeli MPWS extend their selves through sex-consumption. To this end, we conducted in-depth semi-structured interviews with 23 Israeli MPWS. An interpretive epistemology and a constructivist grounded theory methodology guided the data-analysis. We conceptualized three dynamics of self-identity construction processes through sex-consumption: Extending the self through assimilation of products or experiences, Extending the self through the purchasing process, and Extending the self through consuming the imagined. The findings revealed a complex process, whereby MPWS attribute various and contradictory meanings to their possessions, their consumerist experiences, and their purchasing processes. We conclude that consumerism is central to the meanings that MPWS attribute to their engagement in the sex industry. Thus, the theoretical framework of consumerism should be further applied to future studies in this field in order to gain a nuanced and deeper understanding of MPWS and the phenomenon of sex consumption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. The Eyes and Ears of Sexual Exploitation Online: Are Sex Buyers Part of the Prevention Puzzle to Reduce Harms in the Online Sex Industry?
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Keighley, Rachel and Sanders, Teela
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HUMAN trafficking , *SEX crimes , *SEX industry , *HARM reduction , *WEBSITES - Abstract
UK efforts to prevent modern slavery and sexual exploitation online include assessing Adult Service Websites' (ASWs) moderation and prevention responsibilities. Yet little is known about the role of sex buyers, as the political rhetoric assumes they are sexual offenders within the neo-abolitionist context (Serughetti 2013). Drawing from a large-scale study looking at ASWs' responsibilities in preventing sexual exploitation online, this article shares findings from a survey with 142 sex buyers, understanding their role in this arena. Buyers possess detailed knowledge of sex working practices and indicators of exploitation. Thus, as actors in the prevention puzzle, they are uniquely positioned to understand how regulation can assist in crime prevention but equally create unintended consequences for the consensual sex industry online. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Pornography Wars or a Pornography Truce?
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Levey, Tania G.
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PORNOGRAPHY ,FEMINISTS ,HUMAN trafficking ,SEX industry ,ADULT animation - Abstract
The article offers a comprehensive analysis of the debates surrounding pornography in American society. Topics include Burke's exploration of the historical context of pornography debates, covering legal battles and the influence of religious conservatives and feminists; the modern anti-porn movement, with a focus on efforts against sex trafficking and the regulation of online platforms; and evolving attitudes toward pornography.
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- 2024
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18. Overcoming communicative separation for stigma reconstruction: How pole dancers fight content moderation on Instagram.
- Author
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Leybold, Milena and Nadegger, Monica
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SOCIAL media ,INTERNET content moderation ,COMMUNICATIVE competence ,SEX work ,SEX industry - Abstract
This article investigates how stigmatized groups get organized to fight stigmatization through content-moderation practices on social media platforms. We apply a communicative understanding of stigmatization and stigma management, theorizing stigmatization as disruptive for a stigmatized group's communicative connections to (non-)stigmatized groups. This communicative separation makes it particularly difficult for the stigmatized to organize the beneficial relations to other (non-)stigmatized groups needed to reconstruct stigma jointly. In this article, we investigate how stigmatized groups reconstruct their stigma despite communicative separation. Empirically, we build on a netnographic case study of pole dancers protesting a shadowban on Instagram. Shadowbanning represents a stigmatization practice that moderates content based on its association with sex work. The analysis shows how pole dancers and other stigmatized groups manage stigmatization through a process of stigma maintenance and stigma reconstruction. By emphasizing their difference to sex work through assimilating fitness jargon and distancing themselves from the sex industry, the pole dancers maintain the stigma but regain their communicative abilities by siding with Instagram. This victory initiates a shift in emphasizing solidarity and allows pole dancers and other stigmatized groups to embrace the stigma, forge new ties, and reach out to (non-)stigmatized groups to reconstruct stigma jointly. This study extends the stigma management literature by showing the interlinkage between different stigma-management strategies and their implications for overcoming communicative separation. We conclude by discussing the hardships of organizing stigma reconstruction and stigmatized groups' strategies to overcome them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Reproductive healthcare utilization for women in the sex trade: a qualitative study
- Author
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Lior Birger, Yael Benyamini, Yael Goor, Zohar Sahar, and Einat Peled
- Subjects
Reproductive health care ,Maternity care ,Childbirth ,Pregnancy ,Sex industry ,Sex work ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Women in the sex trade encounter significant challenges in obtaining reproductive healthcare. Reports of reproductive healthcare for women in the sex trade center on the prevention and termination of pregnancies, yet most women in the sex trade globally experience full term pregnancies and bear children. This study aimed to explore barriers and enabling factors to providing reproductive healthcare for women in the sex trade in Israel. Methods We conducted a qualitative study utilizing a grounded theory method. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews, conducted between June 2021 and July 2022. Interviews were conducted with practitioners in healthcare settings (n = 20), practitioners in social services settings (n = 15), and women in the sex trade who received reproductive health care-related medical services (n = 13) in Israel. The interviews were audiotaped, transcribed, and thematically analyzed. Results The findings indicated a multilayered structure of healthcare system-related factors and women-related factors. Stigma was noted as a multidimensional barrier, reflected in service providers’ attitude towards women in the sex trade, impairing the patient-provider relationship and impeding women’s help-seeking. However, the creation of a relationship of trust between the women and healthcare providers enabled better health outcomes. Conclusions Based on the findings, we propose recommendations for designing and implementing reproductive healthcare services for women in the sex trade. The recommendations offer to (a) include women with lived experiences in planning and providing reproductive healthcare services, (b) adopt a trauma-informed approach, (c) emphasize nonjudgmental care, (d) train healthcare providers to reduce stigma and bias, and (e) enhance the affordability of health services for women experiencing marginalization.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Clients’ Perceptions of Authentic Intimate Connection on Erotic Webcam Modeling Sites.
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Kaufman, Ellen M., Gesselman, Amanda N., and Bennett-Brown, Margaret
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- *
SEX industry , *SEX workers , *DIRECT mail advertising , *INTIMACY (Psychology) , *INTERNET surveys - Abstract
While early uses of technology in the sex industry centered on increasing accessibility to pornography or expanding advertising opportunities for direct service sex workers, the growing prevalence of personalized, platform-based sexual technologies reflects the postindustrial paradigm of sexual labor in which “authentic” emotional and physical connection is increasingly prioritized. In this study, we explored how erotic webcam modeling platforms (e.g. LiveJasmin) exemplify “bounded authenticity” by offering clients an experience of “genuine” intimacy that is nevertheless constrained by both its transactional nature and technological reality. We conducted a web-based survey of LiveJasmin clients (
N = 2,047) in 2020. We assessed participants’ perceptions of the authenticity of their emotional bonds with models – and the boundaries that potentially constrain these relationships – via quantitative and qualitative measures. Quantitative results revealed that 65% of participants reported having ever experienced an emotional bond with a model, with over half of participants (51.6%) reporting that they believed the models cared about their lives outside the platform. Providing nuance to these findings, qualitative results illustrated the ways in which participants’ perceptions of the emotional authenticity and boundaries of these relationships varied, with participants reporting a range of experiences that extended from perceived “real” connections to those that feel transactional and hollow, but nevertheless shaped by the platform. Our findings ultimately underscore how camsite clients’ perceptions of these relationships mirror the tension between desiring genuine feelings of emotional intimacy from the models and the market and technological constraints of these experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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21. Revaluing the Eros Collection for Australian cultural histories.
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Henry, Claire and Erhart, Julia
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FILM archives , *SEX industry , *PRINT materials , *PUBLIC opinion , *AUDIOVISUAL materials - Abstract
The Eros Collection at Flinders University is the largest collection of materials produced by the sex industry and its affiliates in Australia. Acquired in 1997 and added to over the years, the varied collection (now part of the umbrella Australian Sexuality Collection) includes restricted or censored audiovisual and print materials – in short, porn. Thus this archive – typically a site of protection and care – comprises materials that many people think don’t deserve protection, and this ambiguous status has raised many challenges in terms of how the Collection is valued, researched, and utilized. The thorny question of the Collection’s value is traced in our research through interviews with Special Collections librarians involved with the Collection over different periods and an audit of Collection contents, access, and usage, which we analyse within the broader context of international porn archives and Australian media histories. The article examines how the Collection (specifically its pornographic material) shares key challenges faced by porn archives internationally, including public perception and access, and its uneasy fit within the Australian media histories. We argue that this neglected archive holds promise for understanding porn’s place in Australia’s audiovisual and cultural history. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Understanding the role of street network configurations in the placement of illegitimately operating facilities.
- Author
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de Vries, Ieke and Davies, Toby
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OFFENSES against property , *MULTILEVEL models , *SEX industry , *MASSAGE , *BUSINESS conditions - Abstract
The role of street networks in shaping the spatial distribution of crime has become a foundational component within environmental criminology. Most studies, however, have focused on opportunistic crime types, such as property offenses. In this study, we instead research a theoretically distinct phenomenon by examining the placement of venues that host criminal activity. In particular, we study the relationship between network structure and the placement of illicit massage businesses, which operate on the intersections of illicit and legitimate activity by hosting illicit commercial sex under the guise of legitimate massage. We model their placement as a function of two network metrics: betweenness, which measures a street's usage potential, and a variant called "local betweenness," which measures the potential of nearby streets. Multilevel models are used to examine the importance of these street‐level metrics while accounting for tract‐level covariates. Our findings demonstrate that, unlike property crimes, illicit massage businesses tend to be located on streets that are themselves quiet but that are close to areas of high activity. Such locations seem to combine accessibility and discretion, and therefore, represent ideal conditions for such businesses to thrive. Our findings can inform problem‐oriented approaches to prevent the harms associated with illegitimately operating businesses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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23. Content creation and gig-work in the platform economy: What contemporary sex work can teach us about the futures of digital labor.
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Gorissen, Sebastiaan
- Subjects
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ELECTRONIC commerce , *SEX industry , *SEX work , *PROFESSIONAL identity , *CULTURAL industries - Abstract
AbstractTo come to a closer understanding of platforms’ control and normative influences over the gig-economy, in this study I focus on gig-workers laboring under extreme societal, economic, and algorithmic marginalization in a multi-billion-dollar global media industry: adult entertainers working on direct-to-consumer content creation platforms. Digital sex work problematizes accepted definitions of gig-work, because adult entertainers’ professional identities are not limited to singular platforms, because building community is fundamental, and because all dispersed professional performances cumulatively constitute content creators’ personas. Laborers across creative industries would do well to take note of how adult entertainers survive, work, and thrive in such a hostile environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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24. Stigmatizing and inaccessible: The perspectives of female sex workers on barriers to reproductive healthcare utilization – A scoping review.
- Author
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Birger, Lior, Peled, Einat, and Benyamini, Yael
- Subjects
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SEX work , *HEALTH services accessibility , *MIDDLE-income countries , *REPRODUCTIVE health , *RESEARCH funding , *CONTENT analysis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *THEMATIC analysis , *MEDLINE , *SURVEYS , *LITERATURE reviews , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *ONLINE information services , *SOCIAL stigma , *LOW-income countries , *PATIENTS' attitudes - Abstract
Aim: To systematically map the extent, range and nature of qualitative studies that explored female sex workers' own perspectives on barriers to accessing reproductive healthcare services. Design: A scoping review of the literature utilizing Arksey and O'Malley's method. Data Sources/Review Methods: A search of the electronic databases MEDLINE/ PubMed, PsycNET, Sociological Abstracts, ProQuest, ScienceDirect, HeinOnline, Scopus, Web of Science and Google Scholar was conducted for items published in English between 2001 and 2021. Results: Twenty‐one studies were included in the review, the majority of which were conducted in lower‐middle‐income countries. RHC themes studied were diverse, with a few more studies focusing on STI/HIV, contraceptive use and pregnancy than those focusing on childbirth and postnatal care. The findings indicate barriers in four main domains: socio‐legal barriers, health services‐related barriers, interpersonal barriers and personal history‐related barriers. Stigma was a major multifaceted barrier. Conclusion: Female sex workers experience exclusion in utilizing reproductive healthcare services globally. As such, healthcare services are advised to adopt a nonjudgemental approach, to enhance physical accessibility and to train nurses and other healthcare professionals on reproductive health needs of female sex workers. Finally, knowledge production processes on the RHC of FSW should adopt a holistic view of FSW, by exploring their needs and barriers related to childbirth and maternity care and by including the perspectives of FSW in high‐income countries. Impact: The review offered an in‐depth understanding of female sex workers' own perspectives regarding needs and barriers in utilizing reproductive healthcare services.Findings indicated socio‐legal barriers, health services‐related barriers, interpersonal barriers and personal history‐related barriers.The review could inform the training of nurses and other healthcare professionals in reproductive healthcare services globally.Researchers should adopt a holistic view of female sex workers, by exploring their family planning needs, including barriers related to childbirth, maternity and postpartum care. Reporting Method: We adhered to the EQUATOR guidelines PRISMA Extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA‐ScR): Checklist and Explanation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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25. Abstinence for the sake of modest success: a Chinese anti-masturbation group's path to individualisation.
- Author
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Liang, Chenglin
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PORNOGRAPHY , *SEX industry , *CULTURAL property , *ETHICS - Abstract
Based on three-month online participant observation in "Jie Se Ba," a male-dominated pornography abstinence forum with 6 million users, this article explores how low-status men in China recode the requirements of Chinese individualisation by using China's traditional ethics in order to make individualisation accessible to themselves. I examine their aspirations as desiring selves, their means of self-mastery and the community culture they have established. Due to a lack of financial power, educational background, and cultural resources, members of this group disengage from mainstream desires for financial success and middle-class-style self-fashioning practices. Instead, by appropriating traditional Chinese sexual ethics, they set more modest family-centred aspirations and adopt jiese, or masturbation abstinence, as a means of practicing self-mastery to build their striving selves. In their efforts to integrate themselves into Chinese individualisation, they accept and express a set of conservative gender-sex and familial ethics. This article argues that such a situation is caused, at root, by a social mechanism within Chinese individualisation that restricts, excludes and stigmatises low-status groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Contestations and contradictions: feminist research on structures and institutions governing sex work in India.
- Author
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Guha, Mirna and Walters, Kimberly
- Subjects
- *
SEX workers , *FEMINIST criticism , *SEX industry , *CISGENDER people , *PANDEMICS - Abstract
Taking exception to the persistent and recurrent exceptionalism of sex work within discourses on anti-trafficking, global health, brahmanical patriarchy and Indian nationalism, this special section comprises four articles. Originally conceived as part of a panel for a spring conference scheduled for summer 2020, the articles emerged in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic and include research by Dr Gowri Vijayakumar, Dr Vibhuti Ramachandran, Dr Mirna Guha, and Dr Kimberly Walters. Through an analysis of the historical and contemporaneous experiences of marginalised cis women (dis)engaged in selling sex across diverse contexts, these articles deploy a range of conceptual and methodological approaches to interrogate longstanding institutional efforts to surveil, target and govern their bodies. In doing so, together, they delineate and challenge the enduring legacy of a long history of moral and public health panics that have framed the lives of people who sell sex in India since colonial times. This addresses structural and epistemic violence visited upon sex workers and strengthens ongoing efforts to forward an alternative, intersectional feminist reading of sex work in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Everyday violence and care: insights from fictive kin relations between madams and sex workers in India.
- Author
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Guha, Mirna
- Subjects
- *
SEX workers , *PROCURESSES , *VIOLENCE against women , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOLIDARITY , *SEX industry - Abstract
This article intervenes in the globally polarised terrain of debates on violence and agency in sex work. With a critical eye on how developmentalism governs these debates, the article explores fictive kin relations between women in Sonagachi, a prominent red-light area in Eastern India. Through an analysis of ethnographic observations and life-history interviews among madams and sex workers across three brothel households, this article argues that the configuration of 'family-like' relationships needs to be understood against a backdrop of what 'family' implies for socio-economically marginalised women who sell sex in urban India. Specifically, experiences of choice and coercion within these relationships are predicated on how madams and sex workers respond to kosto, a vernacularised articulation of everyday violence in each other's lives, through jotno or care. Through this, the article sheds light on everyday forms of harm and solidarity between women in a red-light area, challenging institutionalised exceptionalisms of violence within sex work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The material and the moral: contradictory imperatives and the production of trafficking narratives in South India.
- Author
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Walters, Kimberly
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN trafficking , *SEX workers , *CISGENDER people , *ETHNOGRAPHIC analysis , *SEX industry - Abstract
Transnational anti-trafficking networks seek to 'rescue' cisgender women who sell sex in India. This article puzzles out why cis female sex workers might narrate themselves as victims of trafficking in need of rescue despite making comfortable livings as independent sex workers who control their own labour. I draw data from my own ethnographic observations, interviews with 130 Telugu-speaking sex workers, as well as publicly circulating media clips, all from fieldwork conducted in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana between 2009 and 2018. The victim narratives analysed here were told by sex workers familiar with arguments in favour of decriminalising and destigmatizing sex work. My research suggests that many women who sell sex value the material goals of the sex workers' rights movement while nevertheless longing for the immaterial moral security touted by anti-traffickers. I argue that publicly performing trafficking narratives allows women who sell sex to disavow moral agency in participating in what they often refer to as tappudu pani (bad work) while nevertheless accessing the material benefits of sex work. Participating in what Lindquist has called the aesthetic of trafficking, therefore, enables them to plead for sympathy from not only faceless donors but their own moral communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. India and Africa in the pandemic imagination.
- Author
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Vijayakumar, Gowri
- Subjects
- *
SEX workers , *PANDEMICS , *HIV infections , *CORONAVIRUS diseases , *SEX industry - Abstract
In moments of disease panic, sex workers in India have been both abandoned and targeted, subjects of simultaneous fascination, pity, and fear. This article traces the reproduction of a link between sex work and disease, through syphilis, HIV, and COVID-19. In particular, it analyzes popular media and public health literature on the early HIV epidemic in India to emphasize the centrality of transnational comparison and South-South expert linkages, mediated through Northern academic institutions, in constructing sex workers as vectors of disease. I argue that the link between sex workers and HIV solidified within a global field of relational comparisons between India, Africa, and the West, within which sex work crystallized anxieties about the morality of the nation. In the early 1980s, Indian public health experts and journalists contrasted a heterosexual India to a homosexual West, aligning India's AIDS trajectory with those of African countries and marking sex workers as vectors of HIV. By the 1990s, this comparison shifted into one that positionedAfrica's AIDS epidemic as the worst of what India could become. Within this global field of comparisons and circuit of AIDS expertise, the link between sex work and HIV became an unquestionable truth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Commercial Sex as Valuable? Policy Implications of Sex Workers' Perspectives on the Contributions of Their Labor.
- Author
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O'Doherty, Tamara and Bowen, Raven
- Subjects
SEX workers ,SEX industry ,GENDER-based violence ,SEX work ,SEXUAL rights ,VIOLENCE against women ,DEVIANT behavior - Abstract
Introduction: Regardless of the specific form of regulation, sex industries exist and even thrive around the world. Much of the related social policy debate centers on how to suppress or control the industries, operating from the perspective that commodified sex is minimally risky—potentially harmful to the individuals involved and to society—without considering that there may exist benefits that arise from sexual labor. Methods: This article highlights data gathered from 78 qualitative interviews collected in O'Doherty's (2015) and Bowen's (2018) studies with sex workers. Each research project explored various aspects of providing sexualized labor in partially criminalized environments, including how sex workers perceive the role of sex work in society. Results: Participants rejected representations of their work as primarily deviant, unworthy of legitimacy, or even something to abolish as a manifestation of gender-based violence. Instead, sex workers described various positive contributions of their work to their and their clients' lives, as well as to larger society. Conclusion: Unidimensional characterizations of the commercial sex industry fail to incorporate many facets of sexualized labor, resulting in harmful policies that sustain inequity for sex workers. Policy Implications: Social policies regulating commodified sexual services may need to be reconsidered through a more nuanced lens—one that makes space for the opportunities, benefits, and value that sex workers identify, alongside findings related to challenges and risks associated with sex industry involvement. Implicated policies include criminalization, human and labor rights, sexual rights, and public health education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. INDOOR SEX WORKERS IN PUNJAB: A QUALITATIVE ENQUIRY.
- Author
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Sharma, Rachana
- Subjects
SEX workers ,TELECOMMUTING ,SEX work ,WORK environment ,HUMAN trafficking ,SEX industry ,PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
Scholarly works on sex work and sex workers are mostly confined to discourses on human trafficking and the incidence of HIV/STIs among sex workers. Although crucial, this restricted focus has neglected the reality that sex workers are a diverse community, and while their challenges may appear to be linked at first glance, they differ greatly. While extensive research has been conducted on sex workers working in more open settings like brothels, hotels, and streets, there is a scarcity of research on sex workers working in more private spaces, such as, for instance, their own homes. Within the hierarchy of sex workers, home-based sex workers (HBSWs) among the indoor sex workers dominate commercial sex transactions. However, they are often overlooked due to their covert nature and invisible landscape. This chapter addresses the knowledge gap by examining the work lives and conditions of home-based female sex workers (FHBSWs) in Punjab. The study analyzes the complex lives of sex workers who use their home as both a family unit and a workplace. A detailed analysis of the risks and vulnerabilities they face in their daily lives and their coping strategies is also examined in this chapter. The study points out that although working from home may have positive outcomes for sex workers, the integration of sex work into the home environment exposes them to several challenges. Hence, the study emphasizes the need for tailoring interventions for sex workers who operate in different physical environments so that their unique needs and challenges are well addressed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. ¿Españolas en el trabajo sexual? Rutas de movilidad.
- Author
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Meneses Falcón, Carmen
- Subjects
WORKPLACE romance ,SEX work ,SPANIARDS ,SEX industry ,SEX workers - Abstract
Copyright of Migraciones is the property of Universidad Pontificia Comillas, Instituto Universitario de Estudios sobre Migraciones and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Exploring Financial Realities: A Qualitative Study on Income Strategies of Female Sex Workers in Rotterdam’s Unlawful Sex Industry
- Author
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Eggens, Nina
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Sex work and gendered tax imaginaries.
- Author
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Crowhurst, Isabel
- Subjects
- *
SEX work , *SEX workers , *SEX industry , *EQUALITY , *TAXATION - Abstract
By exploring how the taxation of sex work is interpreted and explained, this article aims to expand theoretical and empirical understandings of tax imaginaries – the collectively formed meanings ascribed to taxes, taxpaying, and the purposes they serve – and how gender is mobilised in their construction. It argues that tax imaginaries created and circulated through online expert commentaries on the taxation of prostitution in Italy discredit sex workers through well-established stigmatising gendered tropes, trivialise the predicaments that they face as taxpayers, and ignore or dismiss systemic ambiguities and discriminations that disadvantage sex workers as citizens. Old prejudices against sex workers are thus reinforced and new ones constituted through these tax imaginaries, while the social inequality and marginalisation experienced by sex workers is obscured. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Does Decriminalization Do It?
- Author
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Aroney, Eurydice and Bates, Julie
- Subjects
- *
DECRIMINALIZATION , *SEX industry , *SEX workers , *PRESSURE groups - Abstract
The article focuses on the implications of decriminalization in the sex industry, particularly in New South Wales, Australia. Topics include the limitations of partial decriminalization, challenges faced by sex workers in regulated and unregulated sectors, and the ongoing struggle for comprehensive rights and protections, highlighting the need for continued advocacy and reform efforts.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Survival Sex Work.
- Author
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Bowen, Raven
- Subjects
- *
SEX work , *PRESSURE groups , *SEX industry , *HUMAN sexuality , *FORCED labor - Abstract
The article focuses on the evolving term "survival sex work" and its implications within the sex work community and advocacy efforts. Topics include the transition of PACE Society's mandate to recognize sex work as legitimate labor, the debate over language and definitions within sex worker rights organizations, and the political challenges and critiques of terms like "survival sex" and "forced labor."
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Troubling Decriminalization: A Genealogy of Prostitution Decriminalization in New South Wales, Australia.
- Author
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Scott, John and Scoular, Jane
- Subjects
- *
SEX work , *SEX workers , *SEX work laws , *SEX industry , *JURISDICTION - Abstract
In the context of a fiercely polarized battle on the correct legal response to prostitution, sex workers and their advocates often advance decriminalization as a policy that can protect rights and provide improved health and safety for those involved in the sex industry. And yet this policy, after an initial implementation in New South Wales in 1995, has failed to gain much legislative support in jurisdictions outside Australia and New Zealand. This article moves beyond normative arguments regarding the benefits and limits of decriminalization. Drawing on governmentality approaches, it asks: What discursive conditions made decriminalization possible? In doing so it examines the construction of sex work as a health problem and the normalization of "sex work," arguing that both can be grounded in a neoliberal problematic of governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Vice and Immoral Spaces: German Sperrbezirke, 1949–90.
- Author
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Martin, Annalisa
- Subjects
- *
WORLD War II , *SEX work , *RED-light districts , *DELEGATED legislation , *SEX industry - Abstract
In the aftermath of the Second World War, local authorities across West Germany implemented Sperrbezirke, or restricted areas for prostitution. These restricted areas became a central element of Germany's system of managing commercial sex. This article considers both the legacies of former systems of state-regulated prostitution in the development of Sperrbezirke and regional variations in restricted-area regulations since the 1960s. It examines their relation to red-light districts through regulations on brothels and tolerance zones, as well as the common associations of Sperrbezirke with vice in popular culture. The article then uses prostitutes' responses to restricted-area regulations to assess their impact in practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Pornography Use and the Acceptance of Gender Norm Violation in a School Context.
- Author
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Laporte, Helene and Eggermont, Steven
- Subjects
- *
PORNOGRAPHY , *MEDIA effects theory (Communication) , *GENDER role , *GENDER , *SEX industry - Abstract
Although media effect studies have quite extensively investigated the association between pornography use and gendered attitudes, some questions remain. The present study aimed to address two of these questions by exploring how gendered attitudes and gender beliefs may be influenced by gender typicality and pornography use. First, the literature has not yet accounted for individual differences based on gender typicality. Second, the influence of pornography use on gender beliefs going beyond pornography's script application is understudied. This online cross-sectional study (N = 1,440, Mage = 23.86, SD = 4.79) contributes to the field by investigating the indirect association between pornography use and acceptance of gender norm violation through gendered attitudes and the moderating role of gender typicality. Acceptance of gender norm violation was measured via vignettes describing a school context in which a teacher and a student violated gender norms. Findings indicated that gendered attitudes negatively relate to the acceptance of gender norm violation. Moreover, compared to women, men's pornography use indirectly relates to lower acceptance rates through gendered attitudes. Additionally, for men, specific levels of gender typicality and atypicality form a strengthening and buffering role, respectively. This applies to the association between pornography use and gendered attitudes as well as to the indirect relationship of pornography use with acceptance of gender norm violation. These findings suggest that pornography use may also affect gender beliefs that are unrelated to the scripts present in pornography. Future studies should take into account the type of preferred pornography and unravel the specific impact of women's pornography use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Factors Associated with Sexually Transmitted Diseases in Sexual Workers; An Analytical Cross-Sectional Study.
- Author
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Khan, Zartasha Hanan, Manzoor, Iram, Iqbal, Mawra, Fatima, Menahil, and Maheen, Maliha
- Subjects
- *
SEXUALLY transmitted diseases , *SEX workers , *ALCOHOLISM , *SEX industry , *SERODIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: Sex workers in underdeveloped nations, due to their social marginalised working conditions, have little to no control over a variety of risk factors of unprotected sexual activity. Objectives: To measure the associated factors of sexually transmitted diseases (STD) among commercial sex workers in Lahore. Methods: An analytical cross-sectional study included 280 commercial sex workers from June to November 2022 in different areas of Lahore. Sample was collected by snow-ball sampling technique using a structured questionnaire. SPSS version 23 was used for data analysis. To determine associations between STD status and their lifestyle preferences, chi-square test and the binary logistic test were utilized; a p value of 0.05 was considered significant. Results: Among total 280 commercial sex workers, there were 60(21.4%) females, 123(43.9%) males and 97(34.6%) transgenders. One hundred and ninety (67.8%) were aware of STD's and 90(32.1%) were not. Out of 205 sex workers who underwent serological tests for STD's, 150(53.6%) were tested positive for HIV. Bivariate analysis of lifestyle choices and STD diagnosis roles of commercial sex workers showed significant association of STD status with cigarette smoking (p=0.028), alcohol abuse(p=0.038), average price charged per sexual encounter (p=0.020), use of condom (p=0.010), awareness regarding STDs(p=0.000), intent to get tested for STD(p=0.001) and seeking treatment for STDs (p=0.000). Conclusion: Sexually transmitted diseases were found in 73.2% of sexual workers. Cigarette smoking, Alcohol abuse, less average Price per sexual encounter were significantly higher in STD positive sexual workers. Regarding the knowledge of STDs, intent to get tested again and participate in prevention programs was higher in STD positive sexual workers of Lahore. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Registering a proposed business reduces police stops of innocent people? Reconsidering the effects of strip clubs on sex crimes found in Ciacci & Sviatschi's study of New York City.
- Author
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del Pozo, Brandon, Moskos, Peter, Donohue, John K., and Hall, John
- Subjects
- *
POLICE , *WORKPLACE romance , *SEX industry , *NULL hypothesis , *STOP & frisk (Police method) , *SEX crimes - Abstract
Ciacci & Sviatschi's 'The Effect of Adult Entertainment Establishments on Sex Crime: Evidence from New York City,' published in The Economic Journal, concluded that opening new adult entertainment businesses reduces sex crimes, with the most compelling finding that '[strip clubs, gentleman's clubs, and escort services] decrease sex crime by 13% per police precinct one week after the opening.' We contend that the study's conclusions speak beyond the data, which cannot support these findings because they do not measure the necessary variables. The study uses the date a business is registered with New York State as a proxy for its opening date, but the actual date of opening comes weeks or months later, after requirements such as inspections, licensure, and community board approval. The study then uses police Stop, Question and Frisk Reports as data about subsequent crimes. As reports created to memorialize forcible police stops based on less than probable cause, 94% of these reports document that the police had an unfounded belief in criminal activity, and the person stopped was innocent of any crime. In effect, what the study has done is measure changes in police encounters with innocent people in the week after an entity has filed the paperwork that will eventually allow it to open as a business. The study lacks construct validity, cannot reject the null hypothesis of its most important finding, and its methods fall short of the rigor necessary to permit replication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. What Sex Workers Do: Associations Between the Exchange of Sexual Services for Payment and Sexual Activities.
- Author
-
Johansson, Isabelle and Hansen, Michael A.
- Subjects
- *
SEX work , *SEX workers , *HUMAN sexuality , *SEXUAL intercourse , *SEX industry - Abstract
This study investigates people's associations between the exchange of sexual services for payment and different sexual activities. Sex work entails a range of activities, from in person services to online performances. To date, no study has asked about the activities individuals associate with the exchange of sexual services for payment. The relationship between the exchange of sexual services for payment and specific activities is an important area for inquiry, as there exists considerable variance in people's views on sex work and associations are impacted by a range of attitudes. Using an original survey involving a substantial sample size of adults in the U.S. (n = 1,034), respondents are asked their level of association between the exchange of sexual services for payment and seven activities: pornographic photos, pornographic videos, webcamming, erotic dancing, erotic massages, oral sex, and sexual intercourse. The results reveal that respondents are more likely to associate the exchange of sexual services for payment with activities requiring in person and physical contact between sex workers and clients than non-physical activities. In addition, we find that conservatives are more likely to associate the exchange of sexual services for payment with non-physical activities than liberals. Moreover, we find that people who view the exchange of sexual services for payment as acceptable are more likely to recognize a broader range of activities as associated with such exchanges than are those who hold more negative attitudes. Views on acceptability are more important than are previous experiences of paying for sexual services. Our findings offer valuable insights for policymakers, researchers, and advocates seeking a comprehensive grasp of the complexities surrounding sex work in contemporary society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The moral economy of sex work in Mombasa, Kenya.
- Author
-
Česnulytė, Eglė
- Subjects
- *
SEX work , *MASCULINITY , *SEX industry , *SEX workers , *SUPERNATURAL , *WOMEN employees - Abstract
This paper investigates the process of individuals trying to figure out how the neoliberal economy works by focusing on women selling sex in Mombasa, Kenya. The article will explore the key tensions prevailing in sex work through encounters with supernatural forces narrated by women selling sex. The analysis presented will argue that there are two key tensions that define the moral economy of sex work in Mombasa: the strong stratification among sex workers that position a minority of already better off women in more advantageous ways, thereby leaving most others in precarity; and worries about changing masculinities that result in men who are non-human. Both of those tensions signify the anxieties surrounding an occupation that historically allowed women to accumulate capital and re-insert themselves into Kenyan society in more advantageous positions (see for instance, White 1990, Bujra 1977). Furthermore, the contemporary lived realities of selling sex also speak to the processes of neoliberalisation that are internalised by women selling sex and are becoming a key feature of contemporary commercial sex work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Commercial Sex or Romance? Men's Sexual Scripts in Compensated Dating.
- Author
-
Chu, Cassini Sai Kwan
- Subjects
- *
SEX industry , *DATING violence , *SCRIPTS , *ACADEMIC discourse , *EMPIRICAL research , *INTIMACY (Psychology) - Abstract
Compensated dating is a contestable phenomenon. While most academic and public discourses have paid considerable attentions to young girls who provide compensated dating, little is known about men who buy it. Drawing from 33 in-depth interviews with male clients of compensated dating in Hong Kong, this empirical study provides a qualitative analysis of their experiences. The findings show that compensated dating is not only a platform where men can fulfill their desires and fantasies of youthfulness, passionate sex, and emotional intimacy, but also a place where they can forge meaningful relationships. Compensated dating relationships are dynamic, fluid, and negotiable, which could transform from bounded commercial/counterfeit ones to unbounded/authentic ones. This paper concludes that compensated dating can be a cultural site that is as meaningful as in other noncommercial contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Trajectories of Vulnerability and Resistance Among Independent Indoor Sex Workers During Economic Decline.
- Author
-
Jarvis-King, Laura
- Subjects
SEX workers ,FINANCIAL crises ,SEX industry ,SEX work ,FINANCIAL stress - Abstract
Economic decline, such as we have witnessed in recent years, has disproportionately affected women and evidence demonstrates how financial hardship encourages entry to the sex industry. This worsens the working conditions within sex industry markets but, despite this, evidence documenting the effects of recent austerity measures on the sex industry is lacking. This article draws on qualitative longitudinal research following the 2007–2008 financial crisis to explore work trajectories and experiences of vulnerability through time among independent indoor sex workers in the UK. Participants' experiences demonstrate worsening conditions in the mainstream labour market, particularly for women and, within this constraining context, sex work represents a choice to mitigate economic vulnerability. Yet this creates increased competition in the sex industry alongside declining demand, which compromises economic security and worker wellbeing. Exploring sex workers' experiences over time contributes to a deeper understanding of the relationship between women's work practices and vulnerability during economic decline, which is necessary to inform policy responses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Image transformation of adult entertainment space into children's playspace. Case study: Kalijodo.
- Author
-
Sihombing, Antony, Sapphira, Raissa Rhea, and Putri, Farrah Eriska
- Subjects
- *
SEX industry , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Kalijodo area has shifted its spatial function, which is identical to space for adults to become space for children. Before the eviction Kalijodo was dominated by prostitution and nightlife spots, after the eviction the area was completely transformed into a green area and children's play area. The transformation experienced by Kalijodo affects the image of Kalijodo at that time, this is the main discussion in this thesis. The method used in this discussion is descriptive method, by collecting information through literature studies / literature studies on the transformation and history of the Kalijodo area. In the process of writing the thesis, there was an outbreak of the Corona Pandemic which required people to remain at home and carry out Large-Scale Social Restrictions (PSBB). With this condition, the data collection process will be carried out by studying the precedents of several other prostitution places in Indonesia. The purpose of this thesis is to provide knowledge for readers in order to find out how the transformation of the Kalijodo area can be used for further research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Hope Cultures in Organizations: Tackling the Grand Challenge of Commercial Sex Exploitation.
- Author
-
Sawyer, Katina B. and Clair, Judith A.
- Subjects
HOPE ,SEX industry ,EXPLOITATION of humans ,ORGANIZATIONAL goals ,EMOTIONAL contagion ,CULTURE ,ORGANIZATIONAL behavior - Abstract
Many organizations struggle with tackling grand challenges. Research has shown that coordinating and collaborating are central to these endeavors, but the emotions inherent in doing so have been overlooked. From a two-year narrative ethnographic study of an organization tackling the grand challenge of commercial sex exploitation, we build a key theoretical insight about the role of hope culture in the pursuit of grand challenges. We define hope culture as a set of assumptions, beliefs, norms, and practices that propagate hopeful thoughts and behaviors in pursuit of an organization's goals. We show that when a hope culture is stronger, organizations more vibrantly engage with the grand challenge—the well-being of organizational members flourishes, and organizations ambitiously pursue their goals. When the strength of a hope culture flags, the opposite occurs. Two core mechanisms appear to drive the strength of a hope culture in these contexts: (1) narrative sensemaking of "triggering" organizational events and (2) emotional contagion. Our results demonstrate how hope cultures wax and wane in strength over time, operating as double-edged swords in organizations seeking to tackle grand challenges, with both positive and negative downstream implications. We offer rich, much-needed theory about the emotional realities of tackling grand challenges, as well as necessary guidance on how organizations might hope for a brighter future in the face of adversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Jamais Vu.
- Author
-
SIRISENA, HASANTHIKA
- Subjects
SEX industry ,SOCIAL attitudes ,STRIPTEASE clubs ,RURAL geography ,SOCIAL norms - Published
- 2024
49. An Exploration of the Social Support of Women in Sex Work in Cúcuta, Colombia.
- Author
-
Fabbri, Megan, Alba Niño, Magali, Karandikar, Sharvari, Alvarez Padilla, Yesenia, Coronel, Valentina, Pineda, Maria Alejandra, and Díaz, Yaina
- Subjects
- *
SEX work , *SOCIAL support , *WOMEN'S empowerment , *WOMEN employees , *SOCIAL services , *SEX industry - Abstract
Social support for women in sex work is essential for their overall health and well-being. In the city of Cúcuta, Colombia, both domestic Colombian and migrant Venezuelan women utilize the sex industry to obtain an income. However, with limited resources in this area and little prior research about the current supports, this study explores the social support accessed and received, the social support desired, and identifies the formal social support available to women in sex work in Cúcuta, Colombia. To conduct this research, 28 interviews were conducted: 10 with Colombian women in sex work, 12 with Venezuelan women in sex work, and 6 with professionals representing various social service organizations. Findings indicated that most of the women relied on informal support, yet many women also expressed a desire for formal social support services, specifically related to health care, food, and housing assistance. Nonetheless, gaps persist in the availability of desired formal services This research demonstrates the importance of service providers working with women in sex work directly to understand their lived experiences, while also demonstrating self-determination and empowerment. Further research is needed to measure the implementation efficacy of formal services and the barriers to access for women in sex work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Dimensional Reduction in Barriers and Facilitators to Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) Uptake Willingness for Full-Service Sex Workers.
- Author
-
Ramos, Stephen D., Woodward, Honor, Kannout, Lynn, and Du Bois, Steff
- Subjects
- *
PRE-exposure prophylaxis , *HIV prevention , *SEX work , *ANTIVIRAL agents , *SEX industry - Abstract
Full-Service Sex Workers (FSSWs) face heightened risk of acquiring HIV, yet exhibit relatively low adoption of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP)—an antiviral that substantially reduces HIV acquisition risk. Little work examines barriers and facilitators to PrEP uptake willingness among FSSWs. This study aimed to identify the distinct components of barriers and facilitators to PrEP uptake willingness for FSSWs. Here, we subjected 19 PrEP barriers and facilitators identified in the literature to a principal component analysis (PCA) among a sample of 83 FSSWs. Preliminary statistics supported factorability of data. PCA revealed three distinct components of barriers and facilitators that explained 62.80% of the total variance in survey responses. We labeled these components Behavioral and Social Concerns (α = 0.93), Access and Affordability (α = 0.67), and Biologically Based Health Concerns (α = 0.79). This study shows promise for future clinical and research utility of these factors and provides a basis for future psychometric studies of barriers and facilitators to PrEP uptake willingness among FSSWs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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