ABSTRACT
Sex work is often called the oldest profession in the world. It manifests itself in a plethora of forms. A move to private locations is now taking place: contacts are established via the Internet and meetings take place at appointed places. This makes it more difficult to monitor forced work, and exploitation therefore risks remaining undetected. This book presents empirical findings regarding exploitation in various countries, considering sex workers, traffickers and clients, and the fight against human trafficking. Countries differ vastly in their legislative approaches, ranging from highly repressive to very liberal. This volume asks whether the ongoing process of making and changing laws is sufficiently effective in fighting human trafficking. Other interventions could obtain better outcomes, such as promoting more independence among women and helping trafficked individuals to get out. Less ideology and more attention to the facts of exploitation and sex work might help to achieve these aims.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|63 pages
Law and Regulation
chapter 2|20 pages
The Impact of International and Transnational Legal Instruments on Anti-trafficking Legislation in Europe
chapter 3|19 pages
The Shop Floor Effects of Prostitution Policies in Preventing Human Trafficking
chapter 4|21 pages
Trafficked and on the Run: Rights to Residence for Asylum-Seeking Victims of Trafficking in Anti-trafficking Law and Asylum Law
part II|92 pages
The Sex Worker
chapter 5|26 pages
Sphere of Influence: The Governance of Sex Workers' Rights in Contemporary Europe
chapter 6|21 pages
Overcoming Insult and Injury: China's Transgender Sex Workers and Intimate Partner Violence
chapter 7|21 pages
“You Feel That You Could Have Done So Much More”: The Practices and Potentials of Sex Worker–Founded/–Led Groups in Tackling Sex Sector Exploitation
chapter 8|20 pages
Profiles of Victims of Trafficking for Sexual Exploitation in Bosnia and Herzegovina
part III|59 pages
Combating Human Trafficking
chapter 10|20 pages
Twenty-five Years of Enforcing the Ban against the Purchase of Sexual Services in Sweden
part IV|56 pages
The Client
chapter 13|34 pages
A Critical Look at the Criminalization of the “Use of Services” of Trafficked Persons
part V|19 pages
Conclusions
