2012
DOI: 10.1007/s13178-012-0095-0
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Prostitution as Morality Politics or Why It Is Exceedingly Difficult To Design and Sustain Effective Prostitution Policy

Abstract: The original publication of this article unfortunately contained a mistake. Map 2 has been replaced. The original article has been corrected. The online version of the original article can be found at https://doi.

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Cited by 91 publications
(94 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
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“…All policy making can be seen as the struggle over the realization of core societal values (Stone 1997), but in many of the advanced democracies of the West, prostitution is currently the subject of fierce debates and frenzied, often far-reaching, legislation. Prostitution is an archetypical example of morality politics (Bernstein 2010;Wagenaar and Altink 2012;Wagenaar et al 2017, chap. 2).…”
Section: Challenges To Prostitution Policymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…All policy making can be seen as the struggle over the realization of core societal values (Stone 1997), but in many of the advanced democracies of the West, prostitution is currently the subject of fierce debates and frenzied, often far-reaching, legislation. Prostitution is an archetypical example of morality politics (Bernstein 2010;Wagenaar and Altink 2012;Wagenaar et al 2017, chap. 2).…”
Section: Challenges To Prostitution Policymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moral crusaders advance inflated claims about the magnitude and urgency of the problem, ignoring and fabricating evidence. In the absence of solid data to support their claims, the melodramatic case presented as representative of the issue as a whole is the rhetorical trope of choice (Weitzer, 2007;Vance, 2011;Wagenaar and Altink, 2012). In the Netherlands the main proponents of the trafficking crusade were politicians of the Social-Democratic and fundamentalist Christian parties and radical feminists.…”
Section: The Repressive Turnmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While these studies differ methodologically, a common approach is that they draw on the direct experience of sex workers in different indoor settings. Wagenaar and Altink (2012) note the need to bring together an international body of evidence on the effects of policy measures and the way in which they are designed and implemented. While we are not able to offer a systematic review of policies in the UK and the Netherlands, bringing together our separate research experience and the findings from different empirical studies enables some comparison to be made in terms of the effects of different policies on particular groups of sex workers, specifically those working independently or in collectives.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%