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How does feminism shake up political science, the study of politics
and electoral politics? What difference do feminist political
scientists and politicians make to political institutions, policy
processes and outcomes? The scholarship and activism of pioneering
feminist political scientist Professor Joni Lovenduski helped
establish these questions on the political science agenda. This
book addresses key themes in Lovenduski's seminal work.
State-of-the-art chapters by leading scholars cover gender and
parties; elected institutions and the state; quotas and
recruitment; public opinion and women's interests. Vignettes by
prominent politicians and practitioners, including Dame Anne Begg
MP, Baroness Gould, Deborah Mattinson, and the Rt Hon Theresa May,
bring the academic analysis to life. Deeds and Words reveals the
impact of feminist interventions on politics in the round. Its
groundbreaking assessment of feminist scholarship and politics
offers an appraisal of, and fitting tribute to, Lovenduski's own
contribution to gender studies and feminist politics.
Prostitution has risen up the social and political agenda and has
recently been the subject of considerable media attention,
research, policy formulation and implementation, in particular in
the Sex Offences Act 2003. This book aims to provide an overview of
prostitution today, approaching the subject from an
interdisciplinary perspective and cutting across the conventional
boundaries of sociology, criminology, politics and social policy.
One of its aims is to develop some of the central themes set out in
Eileen McLeod's pioneering book Working Women: prostitution now,
taking full account of contemporary developments and context but
retaining a focus on the lives and experience of prostitutes. The
result is a multi-layered picture of the situation of prostitutes
today and the prospects they face, taking account of the variety of
projects and practices in different parts of the country, and the
broader national policy context. Chapters in the book address the
relationship between prostitutes and the communities in which they
love and work, sex worker rights and unionisation, zoning
prostitution, violence against sex workers, migrant sex work and
trafficking, young people and prostit
This book brings together literature, empirical research findings
from two projects, and policy analysis to examine how some forces
in England have adopted the approach of treating crimes against sex
workers as hate crimes. This book identifies some of the benefits
of the hate crime approach to crimes against sex workers, both
operationally and for some of the victims of crime. The authors
argue that the hate crime approach should not be seen as an
alternative to decriminalisation of sex work but can provide a
pathway to achieving more sensitive but robust policing of crimes
against sex workers and support in accessing justice through the
criminal justice system. They also examine the broader context of
hate crime policy and scholarship as they debate the relevance,
problems and merits of the sex work hate crime model. The book
provides another dimension to current theoretical and policy
debates about widening definitions and law around hate crime to
include other groups beyond existing protected characteristics.
Classic and Contemporary Readings in Sociology introduces the
reader to sociological issues, theories and debates, providing
extracts of primary source material, from both classical and
contemporary theorists. Theorists are examined within their
historical and sociological framework and the text provides an
analysis of developments in sociological thought and research. The
text is divided into four main sections: Part One, Origins and
Concepts, surveys the history of the discipline of sociology and
examines key themes which have influenced sociological theorising
and investigation, in particular, social control, culture and
socialisation. Parts Two and Four, Sociological Theories and
Sociological Research, include a number of readings from the
founding theorists and investigators, including Auguste Comte,
Emile Durkheim, Karl Marx, Max Weber and Charles Booth, and also
include more recent theoretical writing and research approaches.
The focus on theory and research is extended by a selection of
readings centred around the theme of Differences and Inequalities
(Part Three); these readings provide students with examples of work
from an area where sociological theorising and research has been
widely applied.
Classic and Contemporary Readings in Sociology introduces the
reader to sociological issues, theories and debates, providing
extracts of primary source material, from both classical and
contemporary theorists. Theorists are examined within their
historical and sociological framework and the text provides an
analysis of developments in sociological thought and research. The
text is divided into four main sections: Part One, Origins and
Concepts, surveys the history of the discipline of sociology and
examines key themes which have influenced sociological theorising
and investigation, in particular, social control, culture and
socialisation. Parts Two and Four, Sociological Theories and
Sociological Research, include a number of readings from the
founding theorists and investigators, including Auguste Comte,
Emile Durkheim, Karl Marx, Max Weber and Charles Booth, and also
include more recent theoretical writing and research approaches.
The focus on theory and research is extended by a selection of
readings centred around the theme of Differences and Inequalities
(Part Three); these readings provide students with examples of work
from an area where sociological theorising and research has been
widely applied.
Sex Work Now provides an authoritative overview of female sex work
and policy in the UK, and addresses a number of key contemporary
issues and debates. These include sex worker unionization, migrant
sex work and trafficking, communities and sex work, male clients of
sex workers, the policing of prostitution, zoning of street sex
work, young people and sexual exploitation, drug use and sex work,
exiting, violence and sex work. Throughout the book is shaped by
the lives and experiences of sex workers themselves drawing on
applied, policy or participatory action research. This book
approaches the subject from an interdisciplinary perspective,
cutting across conventional boundaries of sociology, criminology,
politics and social policy. Contributors to the book include
academics, researchers, practitioners and activists who are among
the leading commentators on prostitution in the UK. provides
overview of sex work in UK considers impact of recent legislation
and policy, especially Sex Offences Act 2003 focus on lives and
experiences of sex workers themselves
This book takes readers behind the screen to uncover how digital
technologies have affected the UK sex industry. The authors use
extensive new datasets to explore the working practices, safety and
regulation of the sex industry, for female, male and trans sex
workers primarily working in the UK. Insights are given as to how
sex workers use the internet in their everyday working lives,
appropriating social media, private online spaces and marketing
strategies to manage their profiles, businesses and careers.
Internet Sex Work also explores safety strategies in response to
new forms of crimes experienced by sex workers, as well as policing
responses. The book will be of interest to students and scholars
across a range of social science disciplines, including gender
studies, socio-legal studies, criminology and sociology.
This book brings together literature, empirical research findings
from two projects, and policy analysis to examine how some forces
in England have adopted the approach of treating crimes against sex
workers as hate crimes. This book identifies some of the benefits
of the hate crime approach to crimes against sex workers, both
operationally and for some of the victims of crime. The authors
argue that the hate crime approach should not be seen as an
alternative to decriminalisation of sex work but can provide a
pathway to achieving more sensitive but robust policing of crimes
against sex workers and support in accessing justice through the
criminal justice system. They also examine the broader context of
hate crime policy and scholarship as they debate the relevance,
problems and merits of the sex work hate crime model. The book
provides another dimension to current theoretical and policy
debates about widening definitions and law around hate crime to
include other groups beyond existing protected characteristics.
How does feminism shake up political science, the study of politics
and electoral politics? What difference do feminist political
scientists and politicians make to political institutions, policy
processes and outcomes? The scholarship and activism of pioneering
feminist political scientist Professor Joni Lovenduski helped
establish these questions on the political science agenda. This
book addresses key themes in Lovenduski's seminal work.
State-of-the-art chapters by leading scholars cover gender and
parties; elected institutions and the state; quotas and
recruitment; public opinion and women's interests. Vignettes by
prominent politicians and practitioners, including Dame Anne Begg
MP, Baroness Gould, Deborah Mattinson, and the Rt Hon Theresa May,
bring the academic analysis to life. Deeds and Words reveals the
impact of feminist interventions on politics in the round. Its
groundbreaking assessment of feminist scholarship and politics
offers an appraisal of, and fitting tribute to, Lovenduski's own
contribution to gender studies and feminist politics.
The 2005 British general election witnessed unprecedented media
interest in the parties' attempts to 'woo' women voters. There was
much speculation about a fracturing relationship between women and
Tony Blair, the term 'let-down woman' was used by the press to
describe how the relationship had allegedly gone sour. Gender and
Vote in Britain provides comprehensive analysis of the 1992-2005
British general elections and tests whether there were, in fact,
sex differences in leadership evaluations, party of vote and
political attitudes. The interactions between sex, age, class,
race, and education are examined and gender effects are understood
as tectonic plates that will shift and change according to the
specific context of a given election. Thus, the argument of the
book is that background or sociodemographic characteristics play an
important role in electoral choice but that their impact is
mitigated by other factors, such as issue salience. For example
gender may impact upon political attitudes, so that more women than
men prioritise spending on health or education, but this will only
translate into voting behaviour if the political parties diverge on
these issues.
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