Adriaenssens Stef, Hendrickx Jef, Heegemann Patrick
Economics Research Group, Faculty of Economics & Business, KU Leuven, 1000, Brussels, Belgium.
Educational Centre for Mathematics, Education, Econometrics and Statistics, Faculty of Economics & Business, KU Leuven, Brussels, Belgium.
Arch Sex Behav. 2025 Jun;54(6):2069-2083. doi: 10.1007/s10508-025-03140-3. Epub 2025 Jun 16.
While most evaluations of the effects of prostitution policy focus on externalities such as violence, STDs, or risks of human trafficking, this contribution studies the impact on the public's social norms regarding prostitution. European countries that criminalized the purchase of physical sexual services often explicitly aim to change the public's normative evaluation of prostitution. In the same logic, some expect that legalization or regulation of prostitution would "normalize" prostitution. We tested these conjectures empirically with the help of a multi-case study. We estimate the normative effect of six European cases of national legislative changes in Europe, thus not only diversifying the legal change but also bringing in understudied cases. Legal changes include the criminalization of the purchase of sexual services according to the so-called "Nordic model" (Sweden, Norway, and France), a passage to a regulated regime (the Netherlands), and the decriminalization of selling sex (Slovenia and Spain). The evolution of the normative acceptance of prostitution was measured with European Values Study and World Values Study data collected from the 1990s until 2008. The effects were modeled through a difference-in-differences approach combined with a matching procedure. The results indicated that criminalization indeed decreased the public's acceptance of the phenomenon of prostitution. At the same time, decriminalization has effects in both directions: In Spain, norms have become more liberal, while in Slovenia, they have become more judgmental. This more judgmental shift also occurred after the regulatory turn in the Netherlands. Factors related to the specific dynamic of the public debate around the law change probably drive these contextual differences.
虽然大多数对卖淫政策效果的评估都集中在诸如暴力、性传播疾病或人口贩运风险等外部因素上,但本文研究了其对公众关于卖淫的社会规范的影响。将购买性服务定为犯罪的欧洲国家通常明确旨在改变公众对卖淫的规范性评价。按照同样的逻辑,一些人预计卖淫合法化或监管会使卖淫“常态化”。我们借助多案例研究对这些推测进行了实证检验。我们估计了欧洲六个国家立法变化案例的规范效果,这样不仅使法律变化具有多样性,还纳入了一些研究较少的案例。法律变化包括按照所谓“北欧模式”(瑞典、挪威和法国)将购买性服务定为犯罪、转向监管制度(荷兰)以及将性交易非罪化(斯洛文尼亚和西班牙)。我们用从20世纪90年代到2008年收集的欧洲价值观研究和世界价值观研究数据来衡量对卖淫规范性接受的演变。通过差分法结合匹配程序对效果进行建模。结果表明,将购买性服务定为犯罪确实降低了公众对卖淫现象的接受程度。与此同时,非罪化产生了双向影响:在西班牙,规范变得更加宽松,而在斯洛文尼亚,规范变得更具批判性。在荷兰转向监管之后也出现了这种更具批判性的转变。围绕法律变化的公众辩论的具体动态相关因素可能导致了这些背景差异。