Assessing Prostitution Policies in Europe Interdisciplinary Studies in Sex for Sale Series
Coordonnateurs : Jahnsen Synnøve, Wagenaar Hendrik
![Couverture de l’ouvrage Assessing Prostitution Policies in Europe](https://images.lavoisier.fr/couvertures/1317614213.jpg)
Once again, prostitution occupies a prominent position on public and political agendas, both nationally and internationally. A topic of concern and interest within social and academic realms, it is a highly moralised, contested issue that is at the centre of heated and drawn-out debates.
With each chapter dedicated to a separate country and written by a national authority on the subject, Assessing European Prostitution Policies seeks to explore how prostitution is regulated in 21 European countries, thus drawing out important implications for an effective and humane prostitution policy. Indeed, this innovative volume brings together systematic accounts of how national and local forms of governance influence the commercial market for sex as well as the lives of sex workers and third parties. All chapters cover the history of prostitution policy, national laws regulating prostitution, policy formulation and implementation, the national discourse on prostitution, the gap between national and local regulation, the impact of policy on the lives and rights of sex workers, and sex worker advocacy organizations. In addition to this, the authors examine and highlight how immigration, labour, fiscal and welfare law have as much impact on the sex trade as designated prostitution law.
A unique interdisciplinary title that is comprehensive in its coverage, Assessing European Prostitution Policies will appeal to undergraduate and postgraduate students, postdoctoral researchers, sex worker advocacy organisations and policy makers interested in fields such as Sexuality and Prostitution, Public Policy, Criminology and Gender Studies.
1. Introduction: Prostitution Policy in Europe: an Overview (Hendrik Wagenaar)
Western and Central Europe
2. United Kingdom (Phil Hubbard, Teela Sanders, Jane Scoular and Rosie Campbell)
3. Ireland (Paul Ryan and Eilís Ward)
4. The Netherlands (Sietske Altink, Ilse van Liempt, & Marjan Wijers)
5. Belgium (Marion David, Maarten Loopmans)
6. France (Marion David, Mathilde Darley, Véronique Guienne, Gwenaëlle Mainsant, Lilian Mathieu
7. Germany (Ina Hunecke)
8. Austria (Helga Amesberger, Luzenir Caixeta, Elisabeth Greif, Birgit Sauer)
9. Switzerland (Milena Chimienti, Géraldine Bugnon)
Nordic Countries
10. Denmark (Jeanet Bjønnes, Marlene Spanger)
11. Sweden (Petra Östergren)
12. Norway (Synnøve Jahnsen and May-Len Skilbrei)
13. Finland (Niina Vuolajärvi, Minna Viuhko, Johanna Kantola, Anne-Maria Marttila)
Former Eastern Europe
14. Croatia (Ivana Radacic)
15. Slovenia (Iztok Šori, Mojca Pajnik
16. Albania (Armela Xhaho, Alma Lleshi Tandilli)
17. Rumania (Alina Danet)
18. Czech Republic (Barbara Havelkova)
Southern Europe
19. Spain (Mariola Bernal Solano, Alina Danet, Joan Carles March Cerdà)
20. Portugal (Alexandra Oliveira)
21. Italy (Isabel Crowhurst, Patrizia Testaì, Cesare Di Feliciantonio, Giulia Garofalo-Geymonat)
22. Malta (Trevor Calafato)
23. Greece (Laura Maratou-Alipranti, Eleni Rethimiotaki)
European Policies
24. European Union (Joyce Outshoorn)
25. Sex Worker Organisations: International Committee on the Rights of Sex Workers in Europe (Luca Stevenson, Agata Dziuban)
Synnøve Økland Jahnsen is a postdoc at the Uni Research Rokkan Centre in Bergen, Norway.
Hendrik Wagenaar is Professor at the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at the University of Sheffield, UK
Date de parution : 07-2019
15.6x23.4 cm
Date de parution : 09-2017
15.6x23.4 cm
Mots-clés :
Young Men; Isabel Crawford; Sex Workers; Rebecca Pates; International Planned Parenthood Federation European; May-Len Skilbrei; Sex Purchase; Hendrik Wagenaar; Sex Purchase Ban; Prostitution; National Action Plan; trafficking; Prostitution Policy; regulation; Sex Work Sector; public policy; Street Sex Workers; penal law; Male Sex Workers; implementation; Migrant Sex Workers; gender; Trans Sex Work; migration; Human Immuno Deficiency Virus; feminist social movements; HIV; Synnøve Jahnsen; Sex Worker Collectives; Transgender Sex Workers; Street Prostitution; Sex Purchase Act; Prostitution Market; Window Prostitution; Outdoor Sex Work; Public Administration; Massage Parlors; Active Sex Workers; Female Sex Workers