Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures, tables and boxes
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on contributors
- one Frameworks of understanding
- two What’s anti-social about sex work? Governance through the changing representation of prostitution’s incivility
- three Community safety, rights, redistribution and recognition: towards a coordinated prostitution strategy?
- four UK sex work policy: eyes wide shut to voluntary and indoor sex work
- five Out on the streets and out of control? Drug-using sex workers and the prostitution strategy
- six Male sex work in the UK: forms, practice and policy implications
- seven Beyond child protection: young people, social exclusion and sexual exploitation
- eight From ‘toleration’ to zero tolerance: a view from the ground in Scotland
- nine Conclusion
- References
- Index
six - Male sex work in the UK: forms, practice and policy implications
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 July 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures, tables and boxes
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on contributors
- one Frameworks of understanding
- two What’s anti-social about sex work? Governance through the changing representation of prostitution’s incivility
- three Community safety, rights, redistribution and recognition: towards a coordinated prostitution strategy?
- four UK sex work policy: eyes wide shut to voluntary and indoor sex work
- five Out on the streets and out of control? Drug-using sex workers and the prostitution strategy
- six Male sex work in the UK: forms, practice and policy implications
- seven Beyond child protection: young people, social exclusion and sexual exploitation
- eight From ‘toleration’ to zero tolerance: a view from the ground in Scotland
- nine Conclusion
- References
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Recent years have witnessed increasing discussion and debate over the changing nature of sex work. Research into street-based sex work has flourished (McKeganey and Barnard, 1996; Hubbard, 2004a: 2004b; Sanders, 2004), while work on the practices, sexualities and spatialities of indoor sex work is becoming more diverse and voluminous (see, inter alia, Abbot, 2000 on pornography; Rich and Guidroz, 2000 on telephone sex; Smith, 2002 on stripping; Sanders, 2005 on massage parlours). Despite featuring in the literature on sex work, attention to men who sell sexual services has been notably less than that given to female sex workers. Where present, research on the practices of male sex work has focused on three key themes: sexual health, life histories and methods of entry into the sex industry and, more recently, sex work as a form of erotic labour (Aggleton, 1999; Dorais, 2003; Morrison and Whitehead, 2007). Further, most of this research (both in the UK and internationally) is based on studies of street working. Although these are important topics in their own right, this narrow focus overlooks other important aspects of male sex working, for example, that men work in multiple spaces; that sex work constitutes varied types of body work, performance and companionship as well as penetrative services; and crucially, that men are generally absent from sex work policies, which often purport to be gender neutral. As well as this, much of this research focuses on sex work as being harmful to both worker and client, with little consideration of the benefits or indeed the ‘pleasure’ afforded in multiple forms that it can bring to some or even all parties. As one male sex worker, Julian, suggests, sex work is not always intrinsically harmful:
I enjoy my work, I love sex. Okay, I do meet some ‘odd’ people, but you do in every profession, most of my clients are just normal blokes, looking for some consensual sexual pleasure. For me, like many of them, it's a voyage of discovery.
This chapter highlights some of the progress that has been made in research on male sex work, and will explore the diversity of the male scene. In addition to this, the current policy context in England and Wales will be considered in relation to what is known about patterns, places and forms of male sex work.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Regulating Sex for SaleProstitution Policy Reform in the UK, pp. 99 - 120Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2009