By Jane Dodsworth
ISBN-10: 1137431768
ISBN-13: 9781137431769
ISBN-10: 1349568430
ISBN-13: 9781349568437
ISBN-10: 6320153067
ISBN-13: 9786320153060
This publication identifies threat and protecting components influencing routes into, via and out of sexual exploitation and intercourse paintings. It explores how the experience made from key early life and grownup studies affects the power to control roles and identities and offerings they suppose empowered or pressured to make.
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Extra resources for Pathways into Sexual Exploitation and Sex Work: The Experience of Victimhood and Agency
Sample text
39 factors have remained the same for this vulnerable group over the years, but appear often to have gone unrecognised, confused with consensual activity or unacknowledged (see Pearce in Melrose and Pearce 2013 for further discussion of issues of consent and condoned consent). Whilst all young people may be at risk of sexual exploitation, some are especially vulnerable, particularly those in, or leaving, care, those running away or going missing from home or care, those involved in gangs, and trafficked and asylum-seeking children (Campbell and O’Neill 2006, Coy 2008, Pearce 2011, Sharpe 2012, Beckett 2013, Berelowitz et al.
These factors, however, cannot be disentangled from wider structural factors such as poverty, family conflict and homelessness. The negative ‘push’ or risk factors identified by Hayes and Trafford (1997) include poverty; physical and sexual abuse; neglect; family breakdown; bad experiences of the care system, which in turn are linked to running away and going missing; homelessness (often as a consequence of running away); school exclusion; unemployment; lack of benefit provision; inadequate social work responses; inadequate after-care services; and the vicious circle of substance misuse.
The Home Office review Tackling the Demand for Prostitution (Home Office 2008) proposed a new offence to criminalise those paying for sex with someone who is being controlled against their wishes. This was made an offence in the Police and Crime Act 2009, which replaced most aspects of the previous legislation. A significant change brought about by this Act was an amendment to the laws on soliciting and loitering for the purposes of prostitution, shifting the focus to the ‘customer’ and away from the sex worker.
Pathways into Sexual Exploitation and Sex Work: The Experience of Victimhood and Agency by Jane Dodsworth
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