Prostitution Policy in the Nordic Region: Ambiguous Sympathies

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Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., Oct 28, 2013 - Social Science - 184 pages

There is great interest internationally in the development of prostitution policies in the Nordic countries after Sweden, Norway and Iceland have introduced general bans against buying sex whilst selling sex remains legal. In addition, there is a partial ban against buying sex in Finland. This is a different approach from that of several other European countries, where we have seen a decriminalisation of third-party involvement in prostitution as well as to that of the USA which criminalises both the buying and selling of sexual services.

Thus the Nordic countries are often treated as representatives of a 'Nordic model' of prostitution policies.

In this book - the first on the subject - Skilbrei and Holmström argue that these models of policies or policy regimes tend to ignore the trajectories, contexts and consequences of the full range of approaches to prostitution, thus they are too simplistic and static. Prostitution policies in the Nordic countries are multifaceted and dynamic, and cannot be represented as following a straight path and detached from empirical contexts.

Their analysis treats Nordic prostitution policies both as a product of history, of current national and Nordic debates, and of international obligations and changes in the international and national prostitution markets. Furthermore they argue that a broad understanding of the relevant context is necessary so as to place Nordic prostitution policies within broader policy concerns related to gender, class, ethnicity, sexuality, social welfare, immigration and organised crime, as well as to neoliberal forms of governance.

 

Contents

Acknowledgements
What is Prostitution Policy?
The Nordic Context
What isKnown about Prostitution in the Nordic Countries?
6Regulating Prostitution through Criminal Justice Policies
7Nordic Prostitution Policies in Context
References
Index

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About the author (2013)

May-Len Skilbrei, Fafo Institute for Applied International Studies, Norway and Charlotta Holmström, Malmö University, Sweden.

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