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'I've Never Been So Exploited': The consequences of FOSTA-SESTA in Aotearoa New Zealand
- Source :
- Anti-Trafficking Review, Iss 14, Pp 99-115 (2020)
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- Alliance Against Traffic in Women Foundation, 2020.
-
Abstract
- Aotearoa New Zealand’s 2003 decriminalisation of sex work has reduced the exploitation of sex workers, as well as the health and safety risks in the industry. Nevertheless, United States-driven criminalising policies still influence sex workers abroad. The Fight Online Sex Trafficking and Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Acts (FOSTA-SESTA) effectively criminalised websites where sex workers advertise. Shortly before that, the FBI shut down the internationally used Backpage.com, leading many sex workers in both countries to return to the streets or brothels. These events contributed to the rising dominance of one advertising website, NewZealandGirls.com. Drawing on twenty semi-structured interviews and four observation cases with sex workers in Auckland, in this paper, I explore the international consequences of FOSTA-SESTA and the closure of Backpage on my participants. I show that this punitive approach to segments of the online sex industry has not only placed sex workers in greater financial insecurity, but has reduced their ability to control their working conditions. These outcomes, I conclude, have undermined the positive impacts of decriminalisation, while exacerbating socioeconomic, racial, gender, and legal inequalities in Auckland’s sex industry.
- Subjects :
- Poison control
Criminology
Suicide prevention
Occupational safety and health
trafficking
Political science
050602 political science & public administration
advertising
new zealand
Socioeconomic status
Sex work
united states
Sex trafficking
05 social sciences
lcsh:Law
Human factors and ergonomics
decriminalisation
Aotearoa
0506 political science
fosta-sesta
050903 gender studies
technology
Political Science and International Relations
0509 other social sciences
Law
lcsh:K
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 22870113 and 22867511
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Anti-Trafficking Review
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....12bbdbc63b60cef0a8fe76481070f7f8