Sex workers have a lesser citizen status, yet the relationship between sex work and citizenship status has rarely been explicitly considered within extant research. In contrast, this article will critique England and Wales’s sex work legal and policy discourses and frameworks from the perspective of the moral, material, structural, and operational components of citizenship (Lockwood,1996). The operation of citizenship has led to the creation of policy and law (such as the Sexual Offences Act 2003) which has assigned sex workers to a “negatively privileged” group prevented from accessing a full citizenship identity (Lockwood, 1996, 538). Sex workers experience civic deficits (stigmatised, power, and fiscal) and inferior resource allocation, ...
Against a negative background, recent scholarship indicates a socio-cultural and medical reconceptua...
© The Author(s) 2013. This article examines the links between in/visibility, agency and mobility thr...
This article suggests that citizenship should be seen not as a status to be acquired, lost or refuse...
In October 2005 200 delegates from twenty-eight countries in Europe gathered in Brussels to take par...
This article draws from interview material with sex worker rights activists in London, and sex work ...
This article uses Jonathan Simon’s concept of ‘governing through crime’ as a framework to argue that...
This article draws from interview material with sex worker rights activists in London, and sex work ...
This article explores the extent to which sex worker's accounts of living and working in Wales are c...
Dangerous and discriminatory new provisions against sex workers' clients have repeatedly been put be...
“Bonded labourers”, “sex slaves”, “victims of organized crime”. Identified as victims of trafficking...
This book resets the agenda on sex trafficking. Methodologically daring, it brings poststructuralist...
Dangerous and discriminatory new provisions against sex workers' clients have repeatedly been put be...
Public discourses around ‘migrant sex workers’ are often more confident about what migrant sex worke...
In my study, I attempt to illuminate the connection between the creation of citizen-subjects and rec...
This article explores the understudied and undertheorized role that fiscal policies play in shaping ...
Against a negative background, recent scholarship indicates a socio-cultural and medical reconceptua...
© The Author(s) 2013. This article examines the links between in/visibility, agency and mobility thr...
This article suggests that citizenship should be seen not as a status to be acquired, lost or refuse...
In October 2005 200 delegates from twenty-eight countries in Europe gathered in Brussels to take par...
This article draws from interview material with sex worker rights activists in London, and sex work ...
This article uses Jonathan Simon’s concept of ‘governing through crime’ as a framework to argue that...
This article draws from interview material with sex worker rights activists in London, and sex work ...
This article explores the extent to which sex worker's accounts of living and working in Wales are c...
Dangerous and discriminatory new provisions against sex workers' clients have repeatedly been put be...
“Bonded labourers”, “sex slaves”, “victims of organized crime”. Identified as victims of trafficking...
This book resets the agenda on sex trafficking. Methodologically daring, it brings poststructuralist...
Dangerous and discriminatory new provisions against sex workers' clients have repeatedly been put be...
Public discourses around ‘migrant sex workers’ are often more confident about what migrant sex worke...
In my study, I attempt to illuminate the connection between the creation of citizen-subjects and rec...
This article explores the understudied and undertheorized role that fiscal policies play in shaping ...
Against a negative background, recent scholarship indicates a socio-cultural and medical reconceptua...
© The Author(s) 2013. This article examines the links between in/visibility, agency and mobility thr...
This article suggests that citizenship should be seen not as a status to be acquired, lost or refuse...