This special issue of The International Journal of Gender, Sexuality and Law, edited by Laura Graham, Victoria Holt and Mary Laing, brings together a range of voices and knowledges on the issue of Sex Work and the Law: Does the Law Matter? Mirroring global and national sex worker campaigns, official consultations, policy and wider debates over the last two decades, there has been much academic interest in the legal responses to sex work (Scoular and O’Neill, 2007; Graham, 2017; Munro and Della Giusta, 2008). Much of this work has evaluated the varied current legal responses to sex work, how they impact sex workers’ lives, and how the law might be reformed. There is also significant academic and governmental interest in comparative research ...
This reference brief aims to clarify terms and illustrate examples of alternatives to the use of cri...
Drawing on the largest study of the United Kingdom online market in sexual labour to date, this arti...
This article uses Jonathan Simon’s concept of ‘governing through crime’ as a framework to argue that...
This special issue of The International Journal of Gender, Sexuality and Law, edited by Laura Graham...
Drawing on recent empirical work that considers the relationship between different legal approaches ...
The Subject of Prostitution offers a distinctive analysis of the links between prostitution and soci...
BackgroundGlobally, the most important human rights and public health issue that sex workers face is...
In this special issue we examine the global trends in the governance of commercial sex over the past...
Debates about the legalisation of sex work in Australia have tended to focus on the ‘risks’ of sex w...
In Australia, prostitution regulation has taken a very different path from many other countries. Law...
The aim of this paper is to resuscitate the debate on the need for decriminalization of sex work and...
This article looks at the commercial sex phenomenon and how it has evolved in South Africa. The arti...
Drawing on the largest study of the United Kingdom online market in sexual labour to date, this arti...
Sex Work Matters brings together sex workers, scholars and activists to present pioneering essays on...
Sex worker is a term that emerges from a particular historical and political juncture. It reflects a...
This reference brief aims to clarify terms and illustrate examples of alternatives to the use of cri...
Drawing on the largest study of the United Kingdom online market in sexual labour to date, this arti...
This article uses Jonathan Simon’s concept of ‘governing through crime’ as a framework to argue that...
This special issue of The International Journal of Gender, Sexuality and Law, edited by Laura Graham...
Drawing on recent empirical work that considers the relationship between different legal approaches ...
The Subject of Prostitution offers a distinctive analysis of the links between prostitution and soci...
BackgroundGlobally, the most important human rights and public health issue that sex workers face is...
In this special issue we examine the global trends in the governance of commercial sex over the past...
Debates about the legalisation of sex work in Australia have tended to focus on the ‘risks’ of sex w...
In Australia, prostitution regulation has taken a very different path from many other countries. Law...
The aim of this paper is to resuscitate the debate on the need for decriminalization of sex work and...
This article looks at the commercial sex phenomenon and how it has evolved in South Africa. The arti...
Drawing on the largest study of the United Kingdom online market in sexual labour to date, this arti...
Sex Work Matters brings together sex workers, scholars and activists to present pioneering essays on...
Sex worker is a term that emerges from a particular historical and political juncture. It reflects a...
This reference brief aims to clarify terms and illustrate examples of alternatives to the use of cri...
Drawing on the largest study of the United Kingdom online market in sexual labour to date, this arti...
This article uses Jonathan Simon’s concept of ‘governing through crime’ as a framework to argue that...