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The model revealed that high-opportunity-cost women - affluent and educated women with strong family backgrounds and access to resources - may be choosing to enter the high-quality illegal prostitution market, via a high-end escort service or through the Internet. These women would not enter the legal prostitution market, according to the model. Women with low-opportunity costs - that is, women with less education and economic opportunities - choose to enter the low-quality legal market - the brothels in the Nevada counties. Again, based on most conditions of the model, women do not choose to participate in streetwalking prostitution. Considering the finding that low-opportunity-cost women chose the legal market, Hafer pondered reasons for the existence of the illegal market for these women. Hafer discussed the findings’ potential impact on policy.


Due to negative externalities, streetwalking should remain illegal with continued enforcement, she said. Based purely on the outcomes of the model, brothel prostitution should be legalized and regulated in expanded locations. Her policy attention to escort and Internet prostitution focused on regulation, such as licensing, health testing and possibly taxation, as a means to ensure safety and security for both the prostitute and the consumer. For the escort and Internet markets to be regulated, they must be legalized. "The major question concerning policy is what is the overall goal? " Hafer said. "Is it better for society to make prostitution illegal in all circumstances? Legalize prostitution subject to regulation? Farmer holds the Margaret Gerig & R.S. Martin Jr. Chair in Business in the department of economics in the Walton College of Business.


Public sector ethics is a serious business. But it's difficult to know whether to laugh or cry at the latest goings on in Sheffield involving a councillor, an escort agency and a licencing committee. Cllr Gibson, a member of the Labour group, had previously hit the headlines when he was accused of setting up a Twitter account under a different name and issuing offensive tweets against the city's mayor and a Green party councillor. Then he caused a storm of outrage nationwide after tweeting his comment on a 15-year old girl who died of an allergic reaction after eating a Pret a Manger baguette that did not fully list its ingredients on the packaging.


Cllr Gibson said she should have asked what the ingredients were. In an attempt to defend his comment he said: 'I’m not saying it’s her fault. I’m saying that if you have a life threatening allergy it’s your responsibility to ensure that whatever you eat doesn’t contain something that’s going to kill you. In the latest episode the Labour group heard Cllr Gibson was connected with an escort agency, removed him from the licencing committee and set up an investigation. After due deliberation it found that the agency was a client of Cllr Gibson's accountancy firm, providing nothing more than secretarial services, and he was exonerated. Cllr Gibson responded to the investigation: 'I would like to set the record straight in connection to the allegations that I am connected to an escort company.


He added that he was not personally involved with the account, which was dealt with by a member of his staff. Cllr Gibson told LocalGov he has been assured he will be back on the licensing committee next month so perhaps it will blow over and he will desist from any further unfortunate comments on Twitter. But to an ordinary member of the public the whole business must appear confusing. What was the 'description' on which his suspension from the licensing committee was based, and who provided it? What precisely were the allegations? Why, when he was exonerated of any wrong-doing, was he not immediately reinstated?


Why did the Labour group statement cite 'impartiality' as a reason for continuing the suspension? The absence of clear answers to these questions from the Labour group or from the council itself leaves room for speculation, gossip and rumour. It could lead to damaging comments about 'no smoke without fire.' More importantly, it creates an aura of secrecy and behind-the-scenes political manoeuvring. When councillors act in a way thought to be unacceptable, or against a code of conduct, or illegal, it should be dealt with swiftly, clearly and openly. The rules of natural justice should apply. Otherwise, the principle that justice must not only be done but must be seen to be done risks being flouted and eventually forgotten. And that would be in no-one's interests, least of all the reputation of local government itself.


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Rosie is based in the Department of Social Policy and Social Work at the University of York where she is a White Rose Postdoctoral Research fellow writing a book on sex work and hate crime and doing impact work. She has been involved in sex work research, support service delivery and policy development for over two decades. Challenging The Kerb Crawler Rehabilitation Programme", Feminist Review, Vol. 67. with Meryl Stoor. She worked with others to found of UK Network of Sex Work Projects and National Ugly Mugs, the later of which she still supports as a board member. She obtained her PhD from Durham University, School of Applied Social Sciences her thesis examined Merseyside’s approach to treating crimes against sex workers as hate crime. Teela Sanders in a Professor of Criminology in the Department of Criminology, University of Leicester.


Her research focus is on the intersections between gender, regulation and the sex industry, with a focus on exploring hidden economies. Her monographs include Sex Work: A Risky Business (2005) and Paying for Pleasure: Men who Buy Sex (2008). Prostitution: Sex Work, Policy and Politics (Sage, 2009) is co-written with Jane Pitcher and Maggie O’Neill.azcentral.com With Kate Hardy, Sanders has recently completed a large scale project funded by the ESRC on the UK striptease industry. Nicola Mai is a sociologist, an ethnographer and a filmmaker working as Professor of Sociology and Migration Studies at Kingston University. His academic writing and films focus on the experiences and perspectives of migrants working in the globalised sex industry in order to live their lives. Realising Justice for Sex Workers: An Agenda for Change' Rowman and Littlefield as part of the series Global Political Economies of Gender and Sexuality.


My main research interests address psychological, legal and social policy questions on gender, rights, sexuality and the law. It has become increasingly difficult for policy makers and regulators to untangle the complex and inter-related nature of the sex industry and sexual offences. In addition, outcome measures of current interventions do little to improve our understanding of the process by which the subjects in this industry understand and interpret the sexual and social practices in which they are involved. One strand of my research addresses the socio-cultural, psychological, philosophical and human rights issues which surround sexual and gendered behaviour. The majority of this work has been funded by the ESRC (although early work was funded by the Wingate Fellowship and the Ian Karten Educational Trust) and carried out with co-operation of the Metropolitan Police Clubs and Vice Unit.


A second strand of my research involves the investigation into a series of psychological interventions for offenders. I have completed four systematic reviews of psychological interventions for adults and juveniles convicted of sexual offences. These reviews were funded by the Department of Health R&D in Forensic Mental Health and carried out with Charlotte Bilby. We analysed a range of quantitative and qualitative studies as well as compiling a database of the research in this area. One of the major challenges for future behavioural intervention trials is to speed up the evolution of the interventions. In this regard I designed and validated evidence-based methods of assessment to measure and evaluate the work of clinicians engaged in the psychotherapeutic treatment of offenders. Additionally, the ATSO annual residential study school and conference 2001 enabled clinicians to engage with the work of international experts in the field.


Laura is a Lecturer in Criminology at the University of Salford. She completed her PhD at the University of Leeds, which explored the governance of sex trafficking in England and Wales. It focused in particular upon how the strategic priorities and organisational politics of the voluntary sector and the police are negotiated and structured through service delivery. She has also conducted research in partnership with National Ugly Mugs, exploring the nature and extent of violence against sex workers in the UK and published on the topics of the ‘Rescue Industry’ and international sex work policy and practice. She is a feminist and committed to social justice.


Broadly, her current research interests include: migration, policing, victimology, critical approaches to ‘modern slavery’, as well as the sex industry more broadly.usasexguide.nl Dr Alison Jobe is a lecturer in Criminology at Durham University. One of Alison’s key research interests concerns the production of stories relating to sexual trafficking. Her research considers how sexual trafficking has been constructed through the law, the media, within academic research and in interest from activist groups. Empirically, Alison’s research has explored how these discursive processes have interacted with the lives of those identified as sexual trafficking victims/survivors, alongside the impact on other groups. In this respect, Alison’s research explores the social consequences related to the telling of stories, as well as the social and cultural processes within which stories are and/or may be told.


In addition to my monograph, I have published two papers based on my doctoral research; one in Victorian medical humanities with Oxford Interdisciplinary Press, and a book chapter on the femme fatale in Victorian medievalism with Cambridge Scholars. Jane Scoular is a Professor in Law at the University of Strathclyde.wsoctv.com She has been a Visiting Scholar at the Universities of New York and Stockholm where she researched the Swedish law relating to prostitution. She was a member of the Scottish Parliament's Expert Panel on Prostitution and continues to advise policy in this area. Prof Scoular sits on the Management Committee and co-chairs the scientific programme on 'Prostitution Policies and Politics' in the COST Action IS1209: Comparing European Prostitution Policies. This new European research network on prostitution policies brings together scholars on prostitution from throughout Europe. Key publications include: ‘What’s law got to do with it?


How and why law matters in the regulation of sex work’ 2010 37(1) Journal of Law and Society 12-39; Regulating Sex/Work: From Crime Control to Neo-liberal Regulation Scoular & Sanders (eds) (Wiley Blackwell, 2010); (with Hubbard, P.J. Rachel Stuart is a PhD candidate at the University of Kent and a criminology lecturer at the University of Law. Her thesis titled 'How Female Performers Experience Webcamming as a Form of Sexual Commerce', focusses on the lived experience of female webcam performers. She addressed her thesis question by interviewing 40 performers and a number of industry insiders.ptinews.com Thus generating a unique body of data that addresses a sector of sexual commerce that is both legal to perform and which has been somewhat resistant to research.


As a consequence of this research she is has a keen interest in innovative research methods and is currently working on a number of articles that explore ethical methodologies within sex work academia. During 2018 Rachel worked as field researcher on the ground breaking East London Project. In this role she has been instrumental in the recruitment and interviewing of street and indoor sex workers. Having been involved in researching the most criminalised form of sex work i.e. street work and an entirely legal form of sex work i.e. webcamming she is interested in linking sex work to larger debates around precarity, poverty and class.nbcnewyork.com She obtained her PhD from the University of York in 2018.indiatimes.com Her PhD study was inspired by her Master’s project which examined the transition experiences off-street sex workers who problematized how the exit process has been theorized.


Raven's PhD project entitled "In Plain Sight: an examination of ‘Duality’, the simultaneous involvement in sex work and square work further explored how people negotiate employment in both fields. Whilst at York she provided research and administrative support to the Sex Work Research Hub. Dr Katy Pilcher is a Lecturer in Sociology at Aston University. Her research interests centre around gender, sexualities, sex work, ageing, embodiment, and visual research methods. Katy has completed research projects relating to erotic dance, sex work, and ageing and everyday life. She has published articles in a number of journals pertaining to her erotic dance research, and her latest work includes a co-edited collection entitled 'Queer Sex Work' (Routledge, 2015, with Dr Mary Laing and Dr Nicki Smith). Katy is an executive committee member of the Feminist and Women’s Studies Association UK and Ireland.


Dr Tanya Serisier is a lecturer in Criminology in the School of Sociology, Social Policy and Social Work at Queens University Belfast. Her research focuses on the production and dissemination of cultural narratives of sexuality, sexual deviance and sexual violence, and the ways in which women are positioned within them. Her specific areas of research include women’s experiential narratives of sexual violence, negotiations of sexual consent and sexual ethics and attempts to regulate and respond to sexual violence outside the criminal justice system. In relation to sex work specifically, she is interested in sex worker responses to violence and the threat of violence, including the development of ‘Ugly Mugs’ programmes and other industry measures.


She also examines feminist cultural constructions of sex workers as either symbols of feminine victimisation or of female sexual empowerment. She is also currently working on the establishment of an all-Ireland research network around commercial sex and sexual labour. Dr Nicola Smith is Senior Lecturer in Political Science at the University of Birmingham. Nicola's research explores the intersections between feminist political economy and queer theory and, among other projects, she is currently completing a monograph on ‘Queer Sexual Economies’. Laura Graham is a lecturer at Durham Law School, having previously taught Criminal Law at the University of Nottingham. 3 funded PhD at the University of Nottingham supervised by Professor Vanessa Munro, Mr Ralph Sandland, and Professor David Fraser.


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