This book draws together interdisciplinary perspectives to examine the legal, moral, and socio-spatial regulation of sex work in the contemporary context. With a thematic focus on the gendered landscape of sex work, formal and informal methods of socio-spatial control, and (in)access to justice, this book explores the role of space in the regulation of sex work in diverse contexts, from the local to the global. The chapters collectively bring together complex, inter-related issues that impact the lives of sex workers throughout the world, providing evidence of the impacts of regulation on sex workers and subsequent barriers to accessing justice and rights. This collection centres the regulated lives of sex workers, using an intersectional lens that highlights the gendered and racialised impacts of stigma. Incorporating knowledge derived from both academic research and lived experience, this book provides a unique contribution that will be of interest to academics and policy-makers globally.
Emily Cooper is a Senior Lecturer at the School of Law and Policing, University of Central Lancashire, UK.
Laura Graham is a Senior Lecturer in Law at Northumbria University, UK.
Lynzi Armstrong is a Senior Lecturer in Criminology at Victoria University of Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand.
Martin Zebracki is Professor of Human Geography and Social Inclusion at the University of Leeds, UK.
Paul Maginn is an Associate Professor at the University of Western Australia, Australia.