This article analyses critically the 2018 Christchurch Employment Relations Authority’s (the Authority) decision in Hamilton-Redmond and Clifford v Casino Bar Limited, which found that two strip dancers were independent contractors as opposed to employees. The article argues that this decision weakens sex workers’ employment rights. It contends, therefore, that the Authority’s decision diverges from the protective aims of the Prostitution Reform Act 2003. In addition, in relation to employment law more broadly, the article argues that the Authority’s decision reinforces the growing vulnerability experienced by workers in precarious employment
In 2003, Aotearoa New Zealand (NZ) passed the Prostitution Reform Act 2003 (PRA), which decriminaliz...
Internationally, sex workers and other people who participate in the sex industry remain subjected t...
This article will define the context in which sex work is referred to along with the different types...
INTRODUCTION: This article provides insight into a rare instance of a collaborative governance appro...
This article draws from interview material with sex worker rights activists in London, and sex work ...
Aotearoa New Zealand’s 2003 decriminalisation of sex work has reduced the exploitation of sex worker...
This article draws from interview material with sex worker rights activists in London, and sex work ...
Despite continuing contests in Australian states over the validity of sex work as work, Victoria and...
In 2015, Amnesty International joined over 200 sex worker organisations in the call for nations to d...
Society’s perception of a type of work and the people who engage in money-generating activities has ...
© The Author(s) 2019 In 2015, Amnesty International joined over 200 sex worker organisations in the ...
This article draws on research with adult sex workers in indoor settings in Great Britain to explore...
Sex work is a highly gendered form of labour performed mostly by women. This article explores the im...
In 2003 New Zealand passed the Prostitution Reform Act, decriminalising sex work and associated acti...
This article looks at the commercial sex phenomenon and how it has evolved in South Africa. The arti...
In 2003, Aotearoa New Zealand (NZ) passed the Prostitution Reform Act 2003 (PRA), which decriminaliz...
Internationally, sex workers and other people who participate in the sex industry remain subjected t...
This article will define the context in which sex work is referred to along with the different types...
INTRODUCTION: This article provides insight into a rare instance of a collaborative governance appro...
This article draws from interview material with sex worker rights activists in London, and sex work ...
Aotearoa New Zealand’s 2003 decriminalisation of sex work has reduced the exploitation of sex worker...
This article draws from interview material with sex worker rights activists in London, and sex work ...
Despite continuing contests in Australian states over the validity of sex work as work, Victoria and...
In 2015, Amnesty International joined over 200 sex worker organisations in the call for nations to d...
Society’s perception of a type of work and the people who engage in money-generating activities has ...
© The Author(s) 2019 In 2015, Amnesty International joined over 200 sex worker organisations in the ...
This article draws on research with adult sex workers in indoor settings in Great Britain to explore...
Sex work is a highly gendered form of labour performed mostly by women. This article explores the im...
In 2003 New Zealand passed the Prostitution Reform Act, decriminalising sex work and associated acti...
This article looks at the commercial sex phenomenon and how it has evolved in South Africa. The arti...
In 2003, Aotearoa New Zealand (NZ) passed the Prostitution Reform Act 2003 (PRA), which decriminaliz...
Internationally, sex workers and other people who participate in the sex industry remain subjected t...
This article will define the context in which sex work is referred to along with the different types...