2019
DOI: 10.1080/14680777.2019.1642226
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“Not on the Street Where We Live”: walking while trans under a model of sex work decriminalisation

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Cited by 13 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
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“…A survey in July 2019 found at the four most prominent agencies, the proportion was 85 percent, with one agency only employing White women. 5 None of the analysed texts directly mention the race of the workers being discussed, a striking difference compared to texts about other forms of sex work in New Zealand, which often mention the race of (non-White) sex workers (Easterbrook-Smith, 2018, 2020). Questions of racism in the industry are made invisible, as are questions of normative beauty standards: Gill (2007) highlights that other women are often recruited to assist in the monitoring of unruly bodies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A survey in July 2019 found at the four most prominent agencies, the proportion was 85 percent, with one agency only employing White women. 5 None of the analysed texts directly mention the race of the workers being discussed, a striking difference compared to texts about other forms of sex work in New Zealand, which often mention the race of (non-White) sex workers (Easterbrook-Smith, 2018, 2020). Questions of racism in the industry are made invisible, as are questions of normative beauty standards: Gill (2007) highlights that other women are often recruited to assist in the monitoring of unruly bodies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Street-based TFSW of color are particularly vulnerable to arrest. They are often profiled by police as sex workers simply because they are “walking while trans.” 27 Arrest results in increased economic pressure caused by costs associated with money bail and court fees as well as loss of income while incarcerated. These economic pressures may in turn lead TFSW to increase the number of sex work clients in order to mitigate these economic losses.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other sex workers, often street-based or high-volume workers, are produced as unacceptable and comparatively subject to greater stigma. They are Othered, that is, discussed in an ‘us and them’ figuration, and are less able to resist stigmatizing frames (Easterbrook-Smith 2020; Fitzgerald and Abel, 2010; Link and Phelan, 2001).…”
Section: Existing Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Acceptability is sometimes extended to a small number of sex workers, often through positioning them in comparison to other sex workers (Easterbrook-Smith, 2021a). Street-based sex workers have been subject to stigmatization and harassment, with this particularly evident in news media in the period between 2005–2015 when attempts were made to pass two private member’s bills which would have restricted where they could work (Armstrong, 2016; Easterbrook-Smith, 2020). Migrant sex workers are not protected under New Zealand’s decriminalization model, a feature of the legislation which has been criticized for the way it ‘others’ migrant workers, with this ‘othering’ evident in news media coverage of migrant sex work (Armstrong, 2017; Easterbrook-Smith, 2018, 2021b; NZ Herald, 2013a; Neyland, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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