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tacet | 3 years ago

I think the power argument still stands - sex workers often do get abused and treated badly.

On other hand I think that single cause models always are more a device of narrative than real world model.

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elmerfud|3 years ago

But this report is accounting for places where prostitution is legal. European countries with legal prostitution abusing a prostitute is very serious and police take it seriously. Even in some Asian countries where it's illegal but ignored, police very much protect the working girls from bad tourist.

While I don't dispute that power is always part of it, even in consenting sex, this study seems to totally destroy the narrative that it's all about power and that legalization objectifies woman which leads to an increase in rape. That's narrative has been used continually to prevent the legalization and regulation of prostitution in the USA. If this study is true that having a legal outlet meaningful reduces crime and makes women safer, then we've be lied to for years, and you have ask the reason why we have been. Additionally this would also provide some evidence that other forms of sexual release could be managed by providing a legal safe option.

ggm|3 years ago

It's likely sex workers under-report. Possibly for the same reasons women at large do, but I would suspect for different reasons as well. The justice system isn't always equal in how it treats the victims of crime, irrespective of an individuals own breaches of law (and its only a hypothesis that sex workers ARE breaching the law) you should be treated the same, but you aren't.