his article unites the co-authors’ years of empirical research with women in policed, stigmatized, and low-autonomy sex industry sectors in Brazil, China, Italy, and the United States to identify six prevalent forms of exclusion: economic, intersectional, health, safety, public vilification, and policing. We analyze the distinct manifestations of these exclusionary forces in all four sites to introduce criminal creep as theoretical shorthand for the global seepage of ideological, structural, and interpersonal exclusionary forces into social life, professional practice, and socio-legal procedures that marginalize women in the sex industry as victim- criminals in need of rehabilitation. Uniting and building upon literature on feminist engagem...
Sex workers are increasingly documenting financial discrimination when accessing banks, payment proc...
Abstract Background Sex work has a long history and takes different ...
Explores a variety of aspects that women in the sex-based work industry face. Provides insight on th...
This contribution examines how feminist economists have conceptualized sex work and trafficking thro...
This contribution examines how feminist economists have conceptualized sex work and trafficking thro...
The impetus behind this Special Issue emerged from a quest to move beyondbinary thinking in the cont...
This contribution examines how feminist economists have conceptualized sex work and trafficking thro...
Sex worker is a term that emerges from a particular historical and political juncture. It reflects a...
Discourse on sex work is replete with narratives of risk and danger, predominantly focused on violen...
This paper makes a case for decriminalization of sex work in response to recent legislation restrict...
Sex workers face extensive violence and poor access to justice, at the intersections of criminalisat...
This article offers a critical reflection of the regional specificity and dynamics of sex workers’ m...
A longstanding debate within feminism has been whether sex work is empowering or ultimately disempow...
Background: Globally, sex work is highly stigmatized, and the dominant policy approach has been crim...
While the feminist debate on commercial sex reflects strong theoretical differences, all sides ackno...
Sex workers are increasingly documenting financial discrimination when accessing banks, payment proc...
Abstract Background Sex work has a long history and takes different ...
Explores a variety of aspects that women in the sex-based work industry face. Provides insight on th...
This contribution examines how feminist economists have conceptualized sex work and trafficking thro...
This contribution examines how feminist economists have conceptualized sex work and trafficking thro...
The impetus behind this Special Issue emerged from a quest to move beyondbinary thinking in the cont...
This contribution examines how feminist economists have conceptualized sex work and trafficking thro...
Sex worker is a term that emerges from a particular historical and political juncture. It reflects a...
Discourse on sex work is replete with narratives of risk and danger, predominantly focused on violen...
This paper makes a case for decriminalization of sex work in response to recent legislation restrict...
Sex workers face extensive violence and poor access to justice, at the intersections of criminalisat...
This article offers a critical reflection of the regional specificity and dynamics of sex workers’ m...
A longstanding debate within feminism has been whether sex work is empowering or ultimately disempow...
Background: Globally, sex work is highly stigmatized, and the dominant policy approach has been crim...
While the feminist debate on commercial sex reflects strong theoretical differences, all sides ackno...
Sex workers are increasingly documenting financial discrimination when accessing banks, payment proc...
Abstract Background Sex work has a long history and takes different ...
Explores a variety of aspects that women in the sex-based work industry face. Provides insight on th...