ABSTRACT

Interrogating supply/demand from an inter- and multi-disciplinary perspective, this collection broadens engagement beyond the routine analysis of the locus of violence in prostitution and the validity of the prostitute's consent. A focus on the supply/demand dynamic brings into play a range of other societal, economic and psychological factors such as the social construction of sexuality, the viability of alternative choices for prostitutes and clients, and the impact of regulatory regimes on the provision of sexual services. The factors which underlie each component of the supply/demand dyad are also studied and an examination is made of their dynamic interrelation. The collection emphasizes the importance of rendering policy makers alert to the evidence emerging from empirical studies conducted in different fields of enquiry, in the hope of moving beyond polarity and politics at the local, national and international level.

chapter |12 pages

Editors' Introduction

The Regulation of Prostitution: Contemporary Contexts and Comparative Perspectives

chapter |22 pages

Legal Incursions into Supply/Demand

Criminalising and Responsibilising the Buyers and Sellers of Sex in the UKv

chapter |16 pages

Wolfenden 50

Revisiting State Policy and the Politics of Sex Work in the UK

chapter |16 pages

Exploring Exploitation

Trafficking in Sex, Work and Sex Work

chapter |22 pages

Putting Trafficking on the Map

The Geography of Feminist Complicity

chapter |14 pages

Criminalising the Use of Trafficked Prostitutes

Some Philosophical Issues

chapter |18 pages

The Consumer, the Consumed and the Commodity

Women and Sex Buyers Talk about Objectification in Prostitution