University of Leicester.
Br J Sociol. 2019 Sep;70(4):1539-1560. doi: 10.1111/1468-4446.12493. Epub 2018 Oct 14.
It has been well established that those working in the sex industry are at various risks of violence and crime depending on where they sell sex and the environments in which they work. What sociological research has failed to address is how crime and safety have been affected by the dynamic changing nature of sex work given the dominance of the internet and digital technologies, including the development of new markets such as webcamming. This paper reports the most comprehensive findings on the internet-based sex market in the UK demonstrating types of crimes experienced by internet-based sex workers and the strategies of risk management that sex workers adopt, building on our article in the British Journal of Sociology in 2007. We present the concept of 'blended safety repertoires' to explain how sex workers, particularly independent escorts, are using a range of traditional techniques alongside digitally enabled strategies to keep themselves safe. We contribute a deeper understanding of why sex workers who work indoors rarely report crimes to the police, reflecting the dilemmas experienced. Our findings highlight how legal and policy changes which seek to ban online adult services advertising and sex work related content within online spaces would have direct impact on the safety strategies online sex workers employ and would further undermine their safety. These findings occur in a context where aspects of sex work are quasi-criminalized through the brothel keeping legislation. We conclude that the legal and policy failure to recognize sex work as a form of employment, contributes to the stigmatization of sex work and prevents individuals working together. Current UK policy disallows a framework for employment laws and health and safety standards to regulate sex work, leaving sex workers in the shadow economy, their safety at risk in a quasi-legal system. In light of the strong evidence that the internet makes sex work safer, we argue that decriminalisation as a rights based model of regulation is most appropriate.
已经有充分的证据表明,性工作者在不同的地方从事性工作以及在不同的工作环境中会面临各种暴力和犯罪风险。社会研究未能解决的是,鉴于互联网和数字技术的主导地位,包括网络摄像头等新市场的发展,性工作的动态变化性质如何影响犯罪和安全。本文报告了英国基于互联网的性市场的最全面调查结果,展示了互联网性工作者所经历的各种犯罪类型,以及性工作者采用的风险管理策略,这是我们在 2007 年发表在《英国社会学杂志》上的文章的基础。我们提出了“混合安全剧目”的概念,以解释性工作者,特别是独立妓女,如何在使用一系列传统技术的同时,结合数字技术来确保自己的安全。我们深入了解了为什么在室内工作的性工作者很少向警方报告犯罪,反映了所经历的困境。我们的研究结果强调了禁止在线成人服务广告和在线空间中的性工作相关内容的法律和政策变化将如何直接影响在线性工作者采用的安全策略,并进一步破坏他们的安全。这些发现发生在性工作的某些方面通过妓院经营立法被准刑事定罪的背景下。我们的结论是,法律和政策未能将性工作视为一种就业形式,导致性工作受到污名化,并阻止个人共同工作。目前英国的政策不允许制定就业法律和健康与安全标准来规范性工作,使性工作者处于影子经济中,他们的安全在准法律体系中面临风险。鉴于互联网使性工作更安全的有力证据,我们认为,作为一种基于权利的监管模式的非刑事化是最合适的。