Negotiating Sex Work
Unintended Consequences of Policy and Activism
Herausgeber: Showden, Carisa R.; Majic, Samantha
Negotiating Sex Work
Unintended Consequences of Policy and Activism
Herausgeber: Showden, Carisa R.; Majic, Samantha
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Carisa R. Showden is associate professor of political science at the University of North Carolina–Greensboro. She is the author of Choices Women Make: Agency in Domestic Violence, Assisted Reproduction, and Sex Work (Minnesota, 2011). Samantha Majic is assistant professor of political science at John Jay College/CUNY. She is the author of Sex Work Politics: From Protest to Service Provision.
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Carisa R. Showden is associate professor of political science at the University of North Carolina–Greensboro. She is the author of Choices Women Make: Agency in Domestic Violence, Assisted Reproduction, and Sex Work (Minnesota, 2011). Samantha Majic is assistant professor of political science at John Jay College/CUNY. She is the author of Sex Work Politics: From Protest to Service Provision.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University of Minnesota Press
- Seitenzahl: 360
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. April 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 139mm x 215mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 454g
- ISBN-13: 9780816689590
- ISBN-10: 0816689598
- Artikelnr.: 40401436
- Verlag: University of Minnesota Press
- Seitenzahl: 360
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. April 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 139mm x 215mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 454g
- ISBN-13: 9780816689590
- ISBN-10: 0816689598
- Artikelnr.: 40401436
Carisa R. Showden is associate professor of political science at the University of North Carolina–Greensboro. She is the author of Choices Women Make: Agency in Domestic Violence, Assisted Reproduction, and Sex Work (Minnesota, 2011). Samantha Majic is assistant professor of political science at John Jay College/CUNY. She is the author of Sex Work Politics: From Protest to Service Provision.
Contents
AcknowledgmentsAbbreviations
Introduction: The Politics of Sex WorkCarisa R. Showden and Samantha Majic
Part I. Sex Work and the Politics of Knowledge Production1. Researching
Sexuality: The Politics of Location Approach for Studying Sex WorkMichele
Tracy Berger and Kathleen Guidroz2. Beyond Prescientific Reasoning: The Sex
Worker Environmental Assessment Team StudyAlexandra Lutnick3.
Participant-Driven Action Research (PDAR) with Sex Workers in Vancouver
Raven Bowen and Tamara O’Doherty
Part II. Producing the Sex Worker: Law, Politics, and Unintended
Consequences4. Demanding Victims: The Sympathetic Shift in British
Prostitution PolicyAnnie Hill5. Criminalized and Licensed: Local Politics,
the Regulation of Sex Work, and the Construction of “Ugly Bodies”Cheryl
Auger 6. Bad Girls and Vulnerable Women: An Anthropological Analysis of
Narratives Regarding Prostitution and Human Trafficking in BrazilThaddeus
Gregory Blanchette and Ana Paula da Silva7. Raids, Rescues, and Resistance:
Women’s Rights and Thailand’s Response to Human TraffickingEdith Kinney8.
The Contested Citizenship of Sex Workers: The Case of the NetherlandsJoyce
Outshoorn9. Comrades, Push The Red Button! Prohibiting the Purchase of
Sexual Services in Sweden but Not in FinlandGregg Bucken-Knapp, Johan
Karlsson Schaffer, and Pia Levin
Part III. Negotiating Status: The Promises and Limits of Sex Worker
Organizing10. Collective Interest Organization among Sex WorkersGregor Gall
11. Sex Work Politics and the Internet: Carving Out Political Space in the
BlogosphereValerie Feldman12. Gender Relations and HIV/AIDS Education in
the Peruvian Amazon: Women Sex Worker Activists Creating CommunityYasmin
Lalani13. Sex Worker Rights Organizations and Government Funding in Canada
Sarah Beer and Francine TremblayContributorsIndex
AcknowledgmentsAbbreviations
Introduction: The Politics of Sex WorkCarisa R. Showden and Samantha Majic
Part I. Sex Work and the Politics of Knowledge Production1. Researching
Sexuality: The Politics of Location Approach for Studying Sex WorkMichele
Tracy Berger and Kathleen Guidroz2. Beyond Prescientific Reasoning: The Sex
Worker Environmental Assessment Team StudyAlexandra Lutnick3.
Participant-Driven Action Research (PDAR) with Sex Workers in Vancouver
Raven Bowen and Tamara O’Doherty
Part II. Producing the Sex Worker: Law, Politics, and Unintended
Consequences4. Demanding Victims: The Sympathetic Shift in British
Prostitution PolicyAnnie Hill5. Criminalized and Licensed: Local Politics,
the Regulation of Sex Work, and the Construction of “Ugly Bodies”Cheryl
Auger 6. Bad Girls and Vulnerable Women: An Anthropological Analysis of
Narratives Regarding Prostitution and Human Trafficking in BrazilThaddeus
Gregory Blanchette and Ana Paula da Silva7. Raids, Rescues, and Resistance:
Women’s Rights and Thailand’s Response to Human TraffickingEdith Kinney8.
The Contested Citizenship of Sex Workers: The Case of the NetherlandsJoyce
Outshoorn9. Comrades, Push The Red Button! Prohibiting the Purchase of
Sexual Services in Sweden but Not in FinlandGregg Bucken-Knapp, Johan
Karlsson Schaffer, and Pia Levin
Part III. Negotiating Status: The Promises and Limits of Sex Worker
Organizing10. Collective Interest Organization among Sex WorkersGregor Gall
11. Sex Work Politics and the Internet: Carving Out Political Space in the
BlogosphereValerie Feldman12. Gender Relations and HIV/AIDS Education in
the Peruvian Amazon: Women Sex Worker Activists Creating CommunityYasmin
Lalani13. Sex Worker Rights Organizations and Government Funding in Canada
Sarah Beer and Francine TremblayContributorsIndex
Contents
AcknowledgmentsAbbreviations
Introduction: The Politics of Sex WorkCarisa R. Showden and Samantha Majic
Part I. Sex Work and the Politics of Knowledge Production1. Researching
Sexuality: The Politics of Location Approach for Studying Sex WorkMichele
Tracy Berger and Kathleen Guidroz2. Beyond Prescientific Reasoning: The Sex
Worker Environmental Assessment Team StudyAlexandra Lutnick3.
Participant-Driven Action Research (PDAR) with Sex Workers in Vancouver
Raven Bowen and Tamara O’Doherty
Part II. Producing the Sex Worker: Law, Politics, and Unintended
Consequences4. Demanding Victims: The Sympathetic Shift in British
Prostitution PolicyAnnie Hill5. Criminalized and Licensed: Local Politics,
the Regulation of Sex Work, and the Construction of “Ugly Bodies”Cheryl
Auger 6. Bad Girls and Vulnerable Women: An Anthropological Analysis of
Narratives Regarding Prostitution and Human Trafficking in BrazilThaddeus
Gregory Blanchette and Ana Paula da Silva7. Raids, Rescues, and Resistance:
Women’s Rights and Thailand’s Response to Human TraffickingEdith Kinney8.
The Contested Citizenship of Sex Workers: The Case of the NetherlandsJoyce
Outshoorn9. Comrades, Push The Red Button! Prohibiting the Purchase of
Sexual Services in Sweden but Not in FinlandGregg Bucken-Knapp, Johan
Karlsson Schaffer, and Pia Levin
Part III. Negotiating Status: The Promises and Limits of Sex Worker
Organizing10. Collective Interest Organization among Sex WorkersGregor Gall
11. Sex Work Politics and the Internet: Carving Out Political Space in the
BlogosphereValerie Feldman12. Gender Relations and HIV/AIDS Education in
the Peruvian Amazon: Women Sex Worker Activists Creating CommunityYasmin
Lalani13. Sex Worker Rights Organizations and Government Funding in Canada
Sarah Beer and Francine TremblayContributorsIndex
AcknowledgmentsAbbreviations
Introduction: The Politics of Sex WorkCarisa R. Showden and Samantha Majic
Part I. Sex Work and the Politics of Knowledge Production1. Researching
Sexuality: The Politics of Location Approach for Studying Sex WorkMichele
Tracy Berger and Kathleen Guidroz2. Beyond Prescientific Reasoning: The Sex
Worker Environmental Assessment Team StudyAlexandra Lutnick3.
Participant-Driven Action Research (PDAR) with Sex Workers in Vancouver
Raven Bowen and Tamara O’Doherty
Part II. Producing the Sex Worker: Law, Politics, and Unintended
Consequences4. Demanding Victims: The Sympathetic Shift in British
Prostitution PolicyAnnie Hill5. Criminalized and Licensed: Local Politics,
the Regulation of Sex Work, and the Construction of “Ugly Bodies”Cheryl
Auger 6. Bad Girls and Vulnerable Women: An Anthropological Analysis of
Narratives Regarding Prostitution and Human Trafficking in BrazilThaddeus
Gregory Blanchette and Ana Paula da Silva7. Raids, Rescues, and Resistance:
Women’s Rights and Thailand’s Response to Human TraffickingEdith Kinney8.
The Contested Citizenship of Sex Workers: The Case of the NetherlandsJoyce
Outshoorn9. Comrades, Push The Red Button! Prohibiting the Purchase of
Sexual Services in Sweden but Not in FinlandGregg Bucken-Knapp, Johan
Karlsson Schaffer, and Pia Levin
Part III. Negotiating Status: The Promises and Limits of Sex Worker
Organizing10. Collective Interest Organization among Sex WorkersGregor Gall
11. Sex Work Politics and the Internet: Carving Out Political Space in the
BlogosphereValerie Feldman12. Gender Relations and HIV/AIDS Education in
the Peruvian Amazon: Women Sex Worker Activists Creating CommunityYasmin
Lalani13. Sex Worker Rights Organizations and Government Funding in Canada
Sarah Beer and Francine TremblayContributorsIndex