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Is Your House a Brothel? Prostitution Policy, Provision of Sex Services from Home, and the Maintenance of Respectable Domesticity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 August 2014

Jason Prior
Affiliation:
Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology, Sydney E-mail: [email protected]
Penny Crofts
Affiliation:
Faculty of Law, University of Technology, Sydney E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Policy debates on commercial sex services provide increasingly complex insights into work on the street and in large commercial sex premises, yet remain largely silent on the contribution of the domestic realm to commercial sex, despite estimates that it accounts for a significant proportion of all commercial sex transactions. Policies that affect home-based sex work are ambiguous and at times contradictory, veering from the promotion of working from home to anxieties about the assumed offensiveness of sex work. These policies have been often developed without direct consideration of home-based sex work and in the absence of evidence. Remedying this silence, this article analyses policy development for, and the experiences of, home-based sex workers in New South Wales (NSW), Australia. The article concludes that working from home provides sex workers with opportunities for autonomy and wellbeing that are not available in other sex service environments, with minimal amenity impacts to the community.

Type
Themed Section on The Cultural Study of Commercial Sex: Taking a Policy Perspective
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

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