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020 _a9781786350398 (electronic bk.)
040 _aUtOrBLW
050 4 _aHQ115
_b.S64 2016
072 7 _aLAQ
_2bicssc
072 7 _aPOL029000
_2bisacsh
082 0 4 _a306.74
_223
245 0 0 _aSpecial issue
_h[electronic resource] :
_bproblematizing prostitution: critical research and scholarship /
_c[edited by] Austin Sarat.
260 _aBingley, U.K. :
_bEmerald,
_c2016.
300 _a1 online resource (x, 156 p.)
490 1 _aStudies in law, politics, and society,
_x1059-4337 ;
_vv. 71
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references.
505 0 _aSex worker or student? Legitimation and master status in academia / Jenny Heineman --'In my head, I didn't feel like I had done anything wrong': women's experiences prostituting women and girls / Mahri Irvine -- Relationships among stigmatized women engaged in street-level prostitution: coping with stigma and stigma management / Corey Shdaimah, Chrysanthi S. Leon -- Reform or remand? race, nativity, and the immigrant family in the history of prostitution / Anne E. Bowler, Terry G. Lilley, Chrysanthi S. Leon -- Inevitably violent? Dynamics of space, governance and stigma in understanding violence against sex workers / Teela Sanders -- Bad dates: how prostitution strolls impact client-initiated violence / Katie Hail-Jares -- Unionizing sex workers: the Karnataka experience / Subadra Panchanadeswaran, Gowri Vijayakumar, Shubha Chacko, Andy Bhanot.
520 _aThe scholars who contribute to this issue utilize diverse research methods to examine the lived experiences of people engaged in prostitution and the people and institutions that process them. They look at the production of knowledge about prostitution and trafficking by institutional stakeholders, and how legal responses to prostitution and trafficking are affected by class, race, ethnicity, and migration. Drawing on data derived from innovative research methods including auto-ethnography, re-calculation of historical data, and participatory methods, the authors challenge us to re-examine the pro-sex/abolitionist divide, the historical theories of prostitution and ethical concerns around research with people engaged in prostitution. Instead our authors offer new configurations of sex, gender, and prostitution to better inform future scholarship, policy, and programming.
588 0 _aPrint version record
650 7 _aPolitical Science
_xPublic Policy
_xSocial Policy.
_2bisacsh
650 7 _aLaw & society.
_2bicssc
650 0 _aProstitution.
650 0 _aProstitution
_xLaw and legislation.
700 1 _aHail-Jares, Katie.
700 1 _aLeon, Chrysanthi S.
700 1 _aShdaimah, Corey S.
700 1 _aSarat, Austin.
776 1 _z9781786350404
830 0 _aStudies in law, politics, and society ;
_v71.
856 4 0 _uhttps://www.emerald.com/insight/publication/doi/10.1108/S1059-4337201671
907 _a.b17023932
_b2024-02-29
_c2024-02-29
942 _n0
998 _a1
_b2024-02-29
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