Understanding the Law’s Relationship with Sex Work: Introduction to ‘Sex Work and The Law: Does the Law Matter?’

This special issue of The International Journal of Gender, Sexuality and Law, edited by Laura Graham, Victoria Holt and Mary Laing, brings together a range of voices and knowledges on the issue of Sex Work and the Law: Does the Law Matter? Mirroring global and national sex worker campaigns, official consultations, policy and wider debates over the last two decades, there has been much academic interest in the legal responses to sex work (Scoular and O’Neill, 2007; Graham, 2017; Munro and Della Giusta, 2008). Much of this work has evaluated the varied current legal responses to sex work, how they impact sex workers’ lives, and how the law might be reformed. There is also significant academic and governmental interest in comparative research looking at legal responses across jurisdictions (Armstrong and Abel, 2020; Levy, 2014). This special issue takes a broad, critical approach to the relationship between sex work and the law, inspired by Jane Scoular’s (2010) question: does the law matter in sex work? In doing so, this special issue offers an interdisciplinary exploration of the complex relationship between law and sex work. This issue addresses global trends towards criminalisation of sex work, often predicated upon stopping trafficking, and considers the impact of these trends on sex workers, their rights, their working practices, and their marginalisation. It further examines the law’s response to new and emerging issues, such as COVID-19 and digital sex work, reflecting particularly on the varied impacts of over- and under- regulating sex work spaces. This special issue finally reflects on sex workers’ resistance – to current laws, to the expansion of laws, and to their lack of inclusion in debates around law. Throughout this issue, the voices of sex workers are integrated and prioritised, reflecting a commitment to inclusion of expert knowledges around the world.

[1]  May-Len Skilbrei,et al.  Branding the Nordic model of prostitution policy , 2021, The Making and Circulation of Nordic Models, Ideas and Images.

[2]  Ian R Cook,et al.  Platforms, sex work and their interconnectedness , 2021, Sexualities.

[3]  V. Silenzio,et al.  Economic, Mental Health, HIV Prevention and HIV Treatment Impacts of COVID-19 and the COVID-19 Response on a Global Sample of Cisgender Gay Men and Other Men Who Have Sex with Men , 2020, AIDS and Behavior.

[4]  L. Platt,et al.  Sex workers must not be forgotten in the COVID-19 response , 2020, The Lancet.

[5]  P. Östergren From Zero Tolerance to Full Integration: Rethinking Prostitution Policies , 2020 .

[6]  Calogero Giametta,et al.  ‘The Problem of Prostitution’: Repressive policies in the name of migration control, public order, and women’s rights in France , 2019, Anti-Trafficking Review.

[7]  Sharron FitzGerald,et al.  The politics of injustice: Sex-working women, feminism and criminalizing sex purchase in Ireland , 2019 .

[8]  J. Outshoorn Ward, Eilís and Gillian Wylie (eds.), Feminism, Prostitution and the State. The Politics of Neo-Abolitionism , 2019, Sexuality Research and Social Policy.

[9]  O. Larsson Poststructural policy analysis – a guide to practice , 2018 .

[10]  Liat Kozma Prostitution and Colonial Relations , 2017 .

[11]  Laura Connelly The ‘Rescue Industry’ : the blurred line between helpand hindrance , 2015 .

[12]  Jay S. Levy Criminalising the Purchase of Sex: Lessons from Sweden , 2014 .

[13]  Krešimir Petković Governing Through Crime , 2012 .

[14]  C. Mgbako,et al.  Sex Work and Human Rights in Africa , 2010 .

[15]  J. Davidson Sex at the Margins: Migration, labour markets and the rescue industry , 2010 .

[16]  J. Scoular What's Law Got to Do with It? How and Why Law Matters in the Regulation of Sex Work , 2010 .

[17]  T. Rhodes Risk environments and drug harms: a social science for harm reduction approach. , 2009, The International journal on drug policy.

[18]  M. D. Giusta Demanding Sex: Critical Reflections on the Regulation of Prostitution , 2008 .

[19]  Maggie O'Neill,et al.  Regulation Prostitution: Social Inculsion, Responsibilisation and the Politics of Prostitution Reform , 2007 .

[20]  L. Holt Growing up global: economic restructuring and children's everyday lives , 2007 .

[21]  S. Clegg Making Social Science Matter: Why Social Inquiry Fails and How It Can Succeed Again , 2002 .

[22]  S. Brooks Sex Work and Feminism: Building Alliances Through A Dialogue Between Siobhan Brooks and Professor Angela Davis , 1999 .