Skip to main content Site map

Designing Prostitution Policy: Intention and Reality in Regulating the Sex Trade


Designing Prostitution Policy: Intention and Reality in Regulating the Sex Trade

Hardback by Wagenaar, Hendrik (King’s College London, Institute for Advanced Studies in Vienna and University of Canberra); Amesberger, Helga (Instituts für Konfliktforschung); Altink, Sietske (www.sekswerkerfgoed.nl)

Designing Prostitution Policy: Intention and Reality in Regulating the Sex Trade

WAS £85.99   SAVE £12.90

£73.09

ISBN:
9781447324249
Publication Date:
26 Apr 2017
Language:
English
Publisher:
Bristol University Press
Imprint:
Policy Press
Pages:
312 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 6 - 8 May 2024
Designing Prostitution Policy: Intention and Reality in Regulating the Sex Trade

Description

Available Open Access under CC-BY-NC licence. While the debate on regulating prostitution usually focuses on national policy, it is local policy measures that have the most impact on the ground. This book is the first to offer a detailed analysis of the design and implementation of prostitution policy at the local level and carefully situates local policy practices in national policy making and transnational trends in labour migration and exploitation. Based on detailed comparative research in Austria and the Netherlands, and bringing in experiences in countries such as New Zealand and Sweden, it analyses the policy instruments employed by local administrators to control prostitution and sex workers. Bridging the gap between theory and policy, emphasizing the multilevel nature of prostitution policy, while also highlighting more effective policies on prostitution, migration and labour exploitation, this unique book fills a gap in the literature on this contentious and important social issue.

Contents

Introduction Challenges of prostitution policy The local governance of prostitution: regulatory drift and implementation capture The national governance of prostitution: political rationality and the politics of discourse Understanding the policy field: migration, prostitution, trafficking and exploitation Prostitution policy beyond trafficking: collaborative governance in prostitution Summary and conclusions

Back

JS Group logo