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The topic of sex-work/prostitution has long generated contentious
debate, particularly within the broad church of feminism. This
antagonism is reflected in UK policy debates, which are further
complicated by their enactment in spaces of neoliberal hegemony.
This book analyses the plurality of narratives which contribute to
Westminster sex-work/prostitution policy debates and subsequently
seeks to situate them within the social and political conditions of
their production. Hewer illustrates that contemporary
sex-work/prostitution debates are constituted through a complex
entanglement of ideologically hybrid perspectives, which variously
challenge and ingrain extant relations of power. Moreover, by
drawing on a range of feminist and other critical social theories,
Hewer offers a way to think differently about both
sex-work/prostitution debates and sex-work/prostitution itself. The
book will be a valuable resource for researchers and students from
across the social sciences with an interest in the language used to
talk about sex-work and prostitution in policy debates.
The topic of sex-work/prostitution has long generated contentious
debate, particularly within the broad church of feminism. This
antagonism is reflected in UK policy debates, which are further
complicated by their enactment in spaces of neoliberal hegemony.
This book analyses the plurality of narratives which contribute to
Westminster sex-work/prostitution policy debates and subsequently
seeks to situate them within the social and political conditions of
their production. Hewer illustrates that contemporary
sex-work/prostitution debates are constituted through a complex
entanglement of ideologically hybrid perspectives, which variously
challenge and ingrain extant relations of power. Moreover, by
drawing on a range of feminist and other critical social theories,
Hewer offers a way to think differently about both
sex-work/prostitution debates and sex-work/prostitution itself. The
book will be a valuable resource for researchers and students from
across the social sciences with an interest in the language used to
talk about sex-work and prostitution in policy debates.
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