This article examines the association among victimization, modes of sex working, and the locations used by sex workers through an analysis of “Ugly Mug” reports detailing 528 crime acts in 333 reported incidents in New South Wales (NSW), Australia. These forms, voluntarily lodged between 2000 and 2008 by members of NSW's estimated 10,000 sex worker population, suggest that street-based work has a higher victimization rate than other modes of working, including escort work, work in commercial premises, and private work. Although this ostensibly supports the commonly held view that “outdoor” working is more dangerous than “indoor” work, this analysis suggests that most instances of victimization actually occur in private spaces. Hence, it is ...
Policy discussions relating to the selling of sex have tended to fixate on two spaces of sex work: t...
Previous research has shown that sex workers experience extremely high rates of victimization but ar...
This article uses Jonathan Simon’s concept of ‘governing through crime’ as a framework to argue that...
This article examines the association among victimization, modes of sex working, and the locations u...
This nation-wide study examined victimization in Canadian off-street commercial sex. Working in coll...
In this article, we address the experiences of female sex workers in urban Australia through analysi...
In this article, we address the experiences of female sex workers in urban Australia through analysi...
During the last decade 'prostitution' has been characterised as a 'social problem' throughout rural ...
During the last decade 'prostitution' has been characterised as a 'social problem' throughout rural ...
Despite continuing contests in Australian states over the validity of sex work as work, Victoria and...
Debates about the legalisation of sex work in Australia have tended to focus on the ‘risks’ of sex w...
Background: Globally, sex work is highly stigmatized, and the dominant policy approach has been crim...
This article engages with the question of whether or not sex work in the home should be regulated in...
This thesis explores women’s experiences working in off-street prostitution venues in Vancouver, BC....
Discourse on sex work is replete with narratives of risk and danger, predominantly focused on violen...
Policy discussions relating to the selling of sex have tended to fixate on two spaces of sex work: t...
Previous research has shown that sex workers experience extremely high rates of victimization but ar...
This article uses Jonathan Simon’s concept of ‘governing through crime’ as a framework to argue that...
This article examines the association among victimization, modes of sex working, and the locations u...
This nation-wide study examined victimization in Canadian off-street commercial sex. Working in coll...
In this article, we address the experiences of female sex workers in urban Australia through analysi...
In this article, we address the experiences of female sex workers in urban Australia through analysi...
During the last decade 'prostitution' has been characterised as a 'social problem' throughout rural ...
During the last decade 'prostitution' has been characterised as a 'social problem' throughout rural ...
Despite continuing contests in Australian states over the validity of sex work as work, Victoria and...
Debates about the legalisation of sex work in Australia have tended to focus on the ‘risks’ of sex w...
Background: Globally, sex work is highly stigmatized, and the dominant policy approach has been crim...
This article engages with the question of whether or not sex work in the home should be regulated in...
This thesis explores women’s experiences working in off-street prostitution venues in Vancouver, BC....
Discourse on sex work is replete with narratives of risk and danger, predominantly focused on violen...
Policy discussions relating to the selling of sex have tended to fixate on two spaces of sex work: t...
Previous research has shown that sex workers experience extremely high rates of victimization but ar...
This article uses Jonathan Simon’s concept of ‘governing through crime’ as a framework to argue that...