ABSTRACT

This edited volume focuses on charting the rise of neo-abolitionism and offering a critique of the idea, its logics and consequences. A model of state policy which aims to abolish prostitution through legislation, Neo-abolitionism criminalises the buyer of sex but not the seller. It is currently law in Sweden and other Nordic states and dominates the framing of policy debates in many other Western liberal contexts. Pressure for adoption of this policy has come from radical feminists who understand prostitution and sex trafficking as a form of violence against women.

This volume argues that this convergence between radical feminism and state’s interests arises from the emergence of, on the one hand, ‘governance feminism’ which seeks to have its ideals implemented through ‘top-down sovereigntist means’, and on the other hand, state’s interests in legitimising stricter border controls and law enforcement responses in relation to transnational organised criminality, ‘illegal’ migration, and security.

Based around a series of country case studies each chapter will explore the politics surrounding the emergence of neo-abolitionism and its trajectory through those polities, whether the paradigm has been adopted, rejected or is still under debate. The volume will be of great interest to students and scholars of Social and Public Policy, Gender and Women’s Studies, Politics and International Relations and Critical Legal Studies/Criminology.

 

 

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|17 pages

Neo-abolitionism and transnational advocacy networks

Globalising an idea

chapter 2|17 pages

From contested to consensus

Swedish politics on prostitution and trafficking

chapter 3|20 pages

The Netherlands

Analysing shifts and continuities in the governing of sexual labour

chapter 4|20 pages

Strange confluences

Radical feminism and evangelical Christianity as drivers of US neo-abolitionism

chapter 5|17 pages

The Irish parliament and prostitution law reform

A neo-abolitionist shoe-in?

chapter 6|18 pages

Almost abolitionism

The peculiarities of prostitution policy in England and Wales

chapter 7|19 pages

Against the trend

Resistance to neo-abolitionism in Australian anti-trafficking policy debates

chapter 8|15 pages

In search of a fair and free society

The regulation of sex work in New Zealand

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion

Carceral feminism, the state and the sex worker in a globalised era. Whose power?