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Title Negotiating Sex Work : Unintended Consequences of Policy and Activism / Carisa R. Showden and Samantha Majic, editors
Published Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, 2014

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Description 1 online resource (377 pages)
Contents Cover; Contents; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; Introduction: The Politics of Sex Work; Part I. Sex Work and the Politics of Knowledge Production; 1. Researching Sexuality: The Politics-of-Location Approach for Studying Sex Work; 2. Beyond Prescientific Reasoning: The Sex Worker Environmental Assessment Team Study; 3. Participant-Driven Action Research (PDAR) with Sex Workers in Vancouver; Part II. Producing the Sex Worker: Law, Politics, and Unintended Consequences; 4. Demanding Victims: The Sympathetic Shift in British Prostitution Policy
5. Criminalized and Licensed: Local Politics, the Regulation of Sex Work, and the Construction of "Ugly Bodies"6. Bad Girls and Vulnerable Women: An Anthropological Analysis of Narratives Regarding Prostitution and Human Trafficking in Brazil; 7. Raids, Rescues, and Resistance: Women's Rights and Thailand's Response to Human Trafficking; 8. The Contested Citizenship of Sex Workers: The Case of the Netherlands; 9. Comrades, Push the Red Button! Prohibiting the Purchase of Sexual Services in Sweden but Not in Finland
Part III. Negotiating Status: The Promises and Limits of Sex Worker Organizing10. Collective Interest Organization among Sex Workers; 11. Sex Work Politics and the Internet: Carving Out Political Space in the Blogosphere; 12. Gender Relations and HIV/AIDS Education in the Peruvian Amazon: Female Sex Worker Activists Creating Community; 13. Sex Workers' Rights Organizations and Government Funding in Canada; Contributors; Index; A; B; C; D; E; F; G; H; I; J; K; L; M; N; O; P; Q; R; S; T; U; V; W; Y; Z
Summary Globally, discussions about sex work focus on exploitation. The media regularly provides us with stories about teen girls coerced to perform sexual acts for money, frequently beaten and robbed by their pimps or traffickers. While one would have to be hard-pressed to deny that sex workers are victimized, the popular media and our political leaders emphasize sex work as exclusively exploitative. In Negotiating Sex Work, Carisa R. Showden and Samantha Majic present a series of essays that depict sex work as an issue far more complex than generally perceived. Positions on sex work are primarily divided between those who consider that selling sexual acts is legitimate work and those who consider it a form of exploitation. Organized into three parts, Negotiating Sex Work rejects this either/or framework and offers instead diverse and compelling contributions that aim to reframe these viewpoints. Part I addresses how knowledge about sex work and sex workers is generated. The next section explores how nations and political actors who claim to protect individuals in sex work often further marginalize them. Finally, part III examines sex workers' own political-organizational efforts to combat laws and policies that deem them deviant, sinful, or total victims
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes English
Print version record
Subject Prostitution -- Government policy
Prostitutes -- Political activity
Prostitutes -- Labor unions
Prostitution.
Politics, Practical.
Sex Work
Political Activism
Politics
prostitution.
politics.
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Public Policy -- Cultural Policy.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Anthropology -- Cultural.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Popular Culture.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Women's Studies.
Prostitution -- Government policy
Form Electronic book
Author Showden, Carisa Renae, editor.
Majic, Samantha, editor.
LC no. 2013028376
ISBN 9781452941172
1452941173
9781452949338
1452949336