London's Soho, situated in the urban heart of the city has long been understood as both a cosmopolitan and diverse space where transgression and deviance, particularly in relation to the sex industry and sexual commerce, are constitutive of this area. Drawing on three years of ethnographic fieldwork, we add to some of the existing debates on sexual spaces in Soho by documenting the changes to the social/sexual landscape of sex shops in this area, and look to geographers interested in the spatial politics of gender and sexuality to understand the importance of this particular place. Looking at two particular sex shops in Soho, we argue that the spatial practices in this very specific part of the city encourage a disruption of traditional hie...
Purpose – This paper aims to explore how municipal law, in its various guises, serves to police the ...
The solicitation and provision of sexual services for material compensation is played out across the...
Twenty years ago, Ashworth et al (1988) offered a distinctive and innovative interpretation of a neg...
London’s Soho, situated in the urban heart of the city has long been understood as both a cosmopolit...
The themed section consists of articles that explore the relationship between power and space in rel...
This paper explores the changing spatiality of the sex retail industry in England and Wales, from hi...
Sex, Time and Place extensively widens the scope of what we might mean by 'queer London studies'. In...
The bright, glaring neon lights of Soho have long illuminated its deviant character, signposting gay...
Most towns and cities in the UK and US possess a number of venues offering sexually-oriented enterta...
This article explores the interactive relationship between sexuality, ‘race’ and space. By drawing o...
© 2015, © Urban Studies Journal Limited 2015. While the regulation of commercial sex in the city has...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the impact of the current legal framework in England and Wa...
(Sub)Urban Sexscapes brings together a collection of theoretically-informed and empirically rich cas...
(Sub)Urban Sexscapes brings together a collection of theoretically-informed and empirically rich cas...
Individual and collective subjectivities are central to geographical research on clubbing (Binnie, 2...
Purpose – This paper aims to explore how municipal law, in its various guises, serves to police the ...
The solicitation and provision of sexual services for material compensation is played out across the...
Twenty years ago, Ashworth et al (1988) offered a distinctive and innovative interpretation of a neg...
London’s Soho, situated in the urban heart of the city has long been understood as both a cosmopolit...
The themed section consists of articles that explore the relationship between power and space in rel...
This paper explores the changing spatiality of the sex retail industry in England and Wales, from hi...
Sex, Time and Place extensively widens the scope of what we might mean by 'queer London studies'. In...
The bright, glaring neon lights of Soho have long illuminated its deviant character, signposting gay...
Most towns and cities in the UK and US possess a number of venues offering sexually-oriented enterta...
This article explores the interactive relationship between sexuality, ‘race’ and space. By drawing o...
© 2015, © Urban Studies Journal Limited 2015. While the regulation of commercial sex in the city has...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the impact of the current legal framework in England and Wa...
(Sub)Urban Sexscapes brings together a collection of theoretically-informed and empirically rich cas...
(Sub)Urban Sexscapes brings together a collection of theoretically-informed and empirically rich cas...
Individual and collective subjectivities are central to geographical research on clubbing (Binnie, 2...
Purpose – This paper aims to explore how municipal law, in its various guises, serves to police the ...
The solicitation and provision of sexual services for material compensation is played out across the...
Twenty years ago, Ashworth et al (1988) offered a distinctive and innovative interpretation of a neg...