This article aims to explain why guesthouse or `Bed & Breakfast' proprietors in the UK attempt to police sex among guests. Unlike interactive service situations that take place in more neutral locations, guesthouse proprietors open their homes to customers. We propose that they attempt to regulate sexual conduct (as well as other behaviours) in an attempt to delineate their homes as a traditional sphere of family values and purity. Sex is `useful' in this regard for defining what their home is not — a `seedy' hotel or even a brothel. The article presents evidence of the specific regulatory mechanisms deployed by proprietors and the rationale behind them. The research contributes to the interactive service work literature by illustrating the...
Sexual harassment is significantly more common in hospitality than in other industries, and has a ne...
Drawing on empirical data from women who pay for sexual services and those who provide services to w...
This article explores two questions through original primary research. First, can brothels be âgood ...
‘It’s a guesthouse not a brothel’: Policing sex in the home-workplace This paper aims to explain why...
This article aims to explain why guesthouse or `Bed & Breakfast' proprietors in the UK attempt to po...
Copyright © 2014 Cambridge University Press. Policy debates on commercial sex services provide incre...
This article engages with the question of whether or not sex work in the home should be regulated in...
Purpose – This paper aims to provoke discussion and reflection on the role of the erotic in the cult...
Policy discussions relating to the selling of sex have tended to fixate on two spaces of sex work: t...
The solicitation and provision of sexual services for material compensation is played out across the...
In this article we argue that sexuality is not only an undercurrent of service environments, but is...
In this article we argue that sexuality is not only an undercurrent of service environments, but is ...
This study examines hospitality workers’ comments about sexual behaviour in hospitality to help unde...
This article explores the sexualized nature of the gay tourism industry and examines how ‘pink dolla...
This qualitative interpretivist study is focused on massage parlours in Cardiff, Wales. The study ha...
Sexual harassment is significantly more common in hospitality than in other industries, and has a ne...
Drawing on empirical data from women who pay for sexual services and those who provide services to w...
This article explores two questions through original primary research. First, can brothels be âgood ...
‘It’s a guesthouse not a brothel’: Policing sex in the home-workplace This paper aims to explain why...
This article aims to explain why guesthouse or `Bed & Breakfast' proprietors in the UK attempt to po...
Copyright © 2014 Cambridge University Press. Policy debates on commercial sex services provide incre...
This article engages with the question of whether or not sex work in the home should be regulated in...
Purpose – This paper aims to provoke discussion and reflection on the role of the erotic in the cult...
Policy discussions relating to the selling of sex have tended to fixate on two spaces of sex work: t...
The solicitation and provision of sexual services for material compensation is played out across the...
In this article we argue that sexuality is not only an undercurrent of service environments, but is...
In this article we argue that sexuality is not only an undercurrent of service environments, but is ...
This study examines hospitality workers’ comments about sexual behaviour in hospitality to help unde...
This article explores the sexualized nature of the gay tourism industry and examines how ‘pink dolla...
This qualitative interpretivist study is focused on massage parlours in Cardiff, Wales. The study ha...
Sexual harassment is significantly more common in hospitality than in other industries, and has a ne...
Drawing on empirical data from women who pay for sexual services and those who provide services to w...
This article explores two questions through original primary research. First, can brothels be âgood ...