Realising Justice for Sex Workers
An Agenda for Change
Abstract
In the past two decades, feminist politics on prostitution has become more polarised and ideological. On the one hand, those on the radical spectrum of feminist politics have fought long and hard to criminalise sex purchase with the intention of ultimately abolishing prostitution. Other feminists have lobbied the state to recognise and institutionalise sex workers’ human rights.
The collection is both a critical intervention in and a re-orientation of the schism in contemporary feminist prostitution politics. Contributors will use this schism as a platform from which to challenge current debates, and ‘think’ an alternative sex worker-centred politics for social justice. By placing sex workers’ lived experiences of prostitution at the centre of the conversation, the book rejects the hegemony of neo-abolitionism as the solution to the ‘problem’ of sex work.
The book brings international, trans-disciplinary scholars together to address a rights-based agenda for sex work law and policy and consequently for sex workers’ lives. This collection offers an invaluable resource on the subject of how sex workers experience injustices and how we can mitigate this globally through a transformative vision of social justice.
Schlagworte
Policy Migrant Migration Socio-legal Sexually Transmitted Diseases Social Justice Power Prostitution Public Health Political Economy Legal Democracy Interdisciplinary Feminism Bodies Critical Analysis Human Rights Masculinity Material- i–xxxvi Preface i–xxxvi
- 223–228 Index 223–228
- 229–234 About the Contributors 229–234