ABSTRACT

This is an examination, from a feminist historian's standpoint, of the background to the present system of regulating prostitution in Britain - which is generally admitted to be not only unjust and discriminatory, but ineffective even in achieving its stated aims. Concentrating on the 1950s, and especially on the Wolfenden Report and the 1959 Street Offences Act, it is a thorough exposure of the sexual double standard and general misogynist assumptions underlying legislation relating to prostitution. In addition to the detailed analysis of the 1950s legislation and the background to it, there is an exposition of the subsequent workings of the Act, and of attempts to amend or repeal it.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

part |52 pages

PART I The Regulation of Prostitution: Society and Law

part |90 pages

PART II The Wolfenden Committee: Regulating Prostitution in the 1950s

part |51 pages

PART III The Law and Society