Brooks-Gordon Belinda, Morris Max, Sanders Teela
School of Psychological Sciences, University of London, BirkbeckLondon, UK.
Department of Criminology, Kingston University, Kingston, UK.
Sex Res Social Policy. 2021;18(4):809-818. doi: 10.1007/s13178-021-00636-0. Epub 2021 Oct 16.
This special section of , edited by Belinda Brooks-Gordon, Max Morris and Teela Sanders, has its origins in a colloquium sponsored by the University of Cambridge Socio-Legal Group in 2020. The goal was to promote the exchange of ideas between a variety of disciplinary research fields and applied perspectives on harm reduction and the decriminalization of sex work. The colloquium took place during the emergence of the coronavirus pandemic in February 2020.
We explore the impact of Covid-19 on understandings of sex work, outline the basic underpinning legal philosophical question, explore the intersectional politics of decriminalization, summarize contemporary international health and human rights campaigns, explore contemporary public opinion trends on the issue, and illustrate the universal principles. Finally, we summarize the special section papers (N=12).
The Covid pandemic provided a lens through which to analyse the changes that have occurred in sex work and sex work research in the past decade and it also exacerbated intersecting inequalities, accelerated many social shifts already in motion whilst changing the course of others. In combination the papers in this special issue examine sex work policy and research across 12 countries in four continents to provide and important space for international and cross-cultural comparison.
We present the timely contributions of diverse authors and comment on the significance of their research projects which support a decriminalization policy agenda for the benefit of academics, policymakers and practitioners to improve public health strategies and international responses.
The research here amplifies the focus on harm reduction and strengthens the case for public policy that decriminalizes commercial sex between consenting adults as the best strategy to reduce harm.
本特刊由贝琳达·布鲁克斯 - 戈登、马克斯·莫里斯和蒂拉·桑德斯编辑,其起源于2020年剑桥大学社会法律小组主办的一次学术研讨会。目标是促进不同学科研究领域之间的思想交流,以及关于减少伤害和性工作非刑罪化的应用观点交流。该学术研讨会于2020年2月新冠疫情出现期间举行。
我们探讨了新冠疫情对性工作理解的影响,概述了基本的法律哲学问题,探究了非刑罪化的交叉政治,总结了当代国际健康与人权运动,探究了该问题的当代公众舆论趋势,并阐述了普遍原则。最后,我们总结了特刊论文(共12篇)。
新冠疫情提供了一个视角,通过它可以分析过去十年性工作及性工作研究中发生的变化,同时它也加剧了交叉不平等,加速了许多已经在进行的社会变革,同时改变了其他一些变革的进程。本特刊中的论文综合考察了四大洲12个国家的性工作政策与研究,为国际和跨文化比较提供了重要空间。
我们展示了不同作者的及时贡献,并对他们研究项目的意义进行了评论,这些研究支持非刑罪化政策议程,以造福学者、政策制定者和从业者,从而改进公共卫生策略和国际应对措施。
此处的研究强化了对减少伤害的关注,并加强了将成年自愿者之间的商业性行为非刑罪化作为减少伤害最佳策略的公共政策依据。