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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Lost in Space No Longer: The Visionary Union of 'The Wire'

Dupré, Brett 18 May 2012 (has links)
In its serial space, David Simon’s The Wire season two relates the seemingly “disconnected” union men, foreign sex worker women, and African-American drug traders and crosses constructed boundaries of race, gender, sexuality, and geography to evoke the possibility of a transnational working class. The Wire’s serialized narrative trespasses the limitations of money and numbers games and of individual characters to build, scene by scene, what Roderick Ferguson calls in Aberrations in Black: Toward a Queer of Color Critique “the location for new and emergent identifications and social relations” (108).
12

The Conditions of Area Restrictions in Canadian Cities: Street Sex Work and Access to Public Space

MacDonald, Adrienne A. 01 October 2012 (has links)
“Area restriction” is the umbrella term used for this thesis to consider geography-based, individually- assigned orders issued by criminal justice agents to remove and restrict targets from particular city spaces. This research focuses on 13 Canadian cities that use arrest-and-release area restriction strategies to managing street sex work(ers). Despite heavy criticism for their punitive nature, area restrictions have received little academic attention. This project takes an exploratory and descriptive approach to the issue in order to develop a platform for future research. Using qualitative, non-experimental methods it also critically analyzes the implementation, logic and reported impacts of the strategies while drawing implications for how area restrictions relate to citizenship statuses of sex workers by mapping exclusions onto the city. Multiple data sources were included but the most significant and compelling information comes from interviews with police officers and community agency workers. Findings suggest that area restriction strategies contribute to substantial social divides between sex workers and other community members, but also between sex workers and important services, resources and their community. At the same time, the strategy is reported as a “temporary relief” measure that is ineffective at lessening sex trade activity and often leads to displacement and dispersal of sex work(ers). However, collaborative efforts in some cities show promise for achieving goals of ‘helping sex workers off the street.’ Realistic recommendations for area restriction strategies are made that lead to more inclusive approaches that are considerate of needs and concerns of all interest groups linked to the “prostitution problem.”
13

Hotellbranschens roll i kampen mot sexhandeln : en studie om det sociala ansvarstagandet bland hotell i Sverige

Waage, Julia, Laveryd, Peter January 2017 (has links)
Turismindustrin är ständigt växande över hela världen och hotellbranschen är den mest betydelsefulla aktören i det turistiska systemet. Därför är det av stor vikt att den tar sin stora roll och så även sitt samhälleliga ansvar på största allvar. Begreppet Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) har fått en allt större roll inom hotellbranschen under de senaste åren. En ökad medvetenhet om ett socialt ansvarstagande har vuxit fram och studier visar att det har en positiv effekt på företaget. Ett samhällsproblem hotellbranschen behöver ställas inför och hantera är sexhandel. I Sverige finns en sexköpslag som säger att det är olagligt att köpa sex och en kopplerilag som innebär att man inte får hyra ut ett rum med vetskap om att sexhandel pågår. Därav är hotellen i Sverige skyldiga att ta itu med detta problem även om det samtidigt handlar ett allmänt socialt ansvarstagande. Studiens syfte är att ta reda på hur svenska hotell genom sitt sociala ansvarstagande motverkar och förebygger sexhandel. Det som studerats är vilka konkreta strategier hotellen använder sig av, hur arbetet gentemot sexhandel kan påverka ett hotells image samt vilka effekter det har på hotellen, gästerna och det lokala samhället. Utifrån dessa ämnen har tre frågeställningar formulerats och besvarats. Det metodologiska tillvägagångssättet bestod av kvalitativa intervjuer, dokumentstudier samt en kvantitativ enkätundersökning. Tre olika hotellföretag och relevanta samarbetsaktörer valdes ut för att besvara de aktuella forskningsfrågorna. Resultatet visar att arbetet har en positiv effekt på både hotellen, gästerna och det lokala samhället. Betydelsen av utbildning för personalen är central för att kunna hantera problemet på bästa sätt, tillika samarbete mellan de olika aktörerna i det lokala samhället. Valet av ett socialt ansvarstagande gentemot sexhandel påverkar också ett hotells image positivt vilket leder till kundlojalitet och därmed gynnar företaget. Fortsatt forskning på området rekommenderas då det finns en brist på tidigare forskning om sexhandel som berör hotellbranschen. / The tourism industry is continuously growing all over the world and the hotel industry is the most important stakeholder in the touristic system. Therefore it is of utmost importance that it takes its major role and thus its social responsibility seriously. The concept of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has gained an increasing role in the hotel industry in recent years. An increased awareness of social responsibility has grown and studies show that it has a positive effect on the company. One social problem the hotel industry needs to face and handle is sex trade. In Sweden there is a sex purchase act that says it's illegal to buy sex and a procuring act which means that you can not rent out a room with the knowledge that sex trade is in progress. Hence, the hotels in Sweden are obliged to deal with this problem, while at the same time it has to do with a general social responsibility. The purpose of the study is to find out how Swedish hotels counteract and prevent sex trade through their social responsibility. What has been studied is what concrete strategies the hotels use, how the work against sex trade can affect the image of a hotel and what effects it has on hotels, the guests and the local community. Based on these topics, three questions have been formulated and answered. The methodological approach consisted of qualitative interviews, document studies and a quantitative questionnaire survey. Three different hotel companies and relevant collaborators were selected to answer the research questions. The result shows that the work has a positive effect both on the hotels, the guests and the local community. The importance of staff training is central in order to handle the problem in the best possible way, as well as cooperation between the different actors in the local community. The choice of social responsibility regarding sex trade in the hotels also has a positive effect on the image of a hotel which leads to customer loyalty thus benefiting the company. Continued research in the field is recommended since there is a lack of previous research on sex trade that concerns the hotel industry.
14

The Conditions of Area Restrictions in Canadian Cities: Street Sex Work and Access to Public Space

MacDonald, Adrienne A. January 2012 (has links)
“Area restriction” is the umbrella term used for this thesis to consider geography-based, individually- assigned orders issued by criminal justice agents to remove and restrict targets from particular city spaces. This research focuses on 13 Canadian cities that use arrest-and-release area restriction strategies to managing street sex work(ers). Despite heavy criticism for their punitive nature, area restrictions have received little academic attention. This project takes an exploratory and descriptive approach to the issue in order to develop a platform for future research. Using qualitative, non-experimental methods it also critically analyzes the implementation, logic and reported impacts of the strategies while drawing implications for how area restrictions relate to citizenship statuses of sex workers by mapping exclusions onto the city. Multiple data sources were included but the most significant and compelling information comes from interviews with police officers and community agency workers. Findings suggest that area restriction strategies contribute to substantial social divides between sex workers and other community members, but also between sex workers and important services, resources and their community. At the same time, the strategy is reported as a “temporary relief” measure that is ineffective at lessening sex trade activity and often leads to displacement and dispersal of sex work(ers). However, collaborative efforts in some cities show promise for achieving goals of ‘helping sex workers off the street.’ Realistic recommendations for area restriction strategies are made that lead to more inclusive approaches that are considerate of needs and concerns of all interest groups linked to the “prostitution problem.”
15

Beteendeförändring hos män som köper sex : ur yrkesverksammas perspektiv / Behavioral change in men who buy sex : professional perspectives

Hertzberg, Lina January 2020 (has links)
I arbetet mot människohandel och prostitution understryks vikten av att minska efterfrågan på sexköp, det vill säga att få män sluta köpa sex. Med detta är det därför relevant att skapa en förståelse för hur man kan få sexköpare att ändra sitt beteende för att på så sätt stoppa den sexuella exploatering av kvinnor som sker genom sexhandel. Syftet med denna studie är att undersöka yrkesverksammas erfarenheter av sexköpare som söker hjälp respektive sexköpare som inte gör det, för att skapa en förståelse för vad som gör att sexköpare ändrar sitt beteende. Studien bygger på kvalitativa intervjuer med yrkesverksamma från hela Sverige, materialet har sedan analyserats med tematisk analys. I resultatet framgår det att det som upplevs vara betydande för en beteendeförändring hos män som köper sex är att skapa motivation samt medvetenhet hos männen. För att detta ska hända anses det vara betydelsefullt att komma åt sexköparnas kognitiva struktur som gör att de exempelvis rättfärdigar sitt beteende och där med fortsätter med beteendet. Vidare anses även att lära sig hantera sina känslor på ett hälsosamt sätt samt att det finns konsekvenser för sexköp vara betydande för att få män att sluta köpa sex. / In the fight against human trafficking and prostitution many emphasize the importance of working towards reducing the demand, in other words, decreasing the number of men who buy sex. Therefore, it can be considered important to create an understanding of how to get sex buyers to change their behavior and by doing so, stop the sexual exploitation of women through sex trade. The purpose of this study is to examine the experiences of professionals who meet sex buyers who get help changing their behavior and sex buyers who do not, in order to create an understanding what makes men who buy sex change their behavior according to professionals. The study is based on qualitative interviews with professionals from different parts of Sweden and has been analyzed using thematic analysis. The result confers the importance of creating motivation and awareness among sex buyers, in order to get them to change their behavior. To make this happen, it is considered important directing efforts to reconstruct the cognitive structure of the sex buyers, which for instance justifies their behavior and thereby counteract changing it. Furthermore, results from the interviews also indicated that it is important for the men to learn how to manage their emotions in a non-dysfunctional way, along with the existence of consequences for buying sex.
16

"We Have Never Allowed Such A Thing Here...": Social Responses to Saskatchewan's Early Sex Trade, 1880 to 1920

2013 August 1900 (has links)
Despite what the title suggests, Saskatchewan had a booming sex trade in its early years. The area attracted hundreds of women sex workers before Saskatchewan had even become a province in 1905. They were drawn to the area by the demands of bachelors who dominated Canada's prairie west. According to Saskatchewan's moral reformers, however, the sex trade was a hindrance to the province's Christian potential. They called for its abolishment and headed white slavery campaigns that characterized prostitution as a form of slavery. Their approach stood in contrast with law enforcement's stance on the trade. The police took a tolerant approach, allowing its operation as long as sex workers and their clients remained circumspect. Law enforcement's approach reflected their own propensity to use the services of sex workers as well as community attitudes toward the trade. Some communities were more welcoming of sex workers, while others demanded that police suppress the trade. Saskatchewan's newspapers also reflected differing attitudes toward the trade. While Regina's Leader purveyed a no tolerance view of the sex trade, Saskatoon's Phoenix and Star held more tolerant views. Saskatchewan's newspapers reveal that as the province's population increased and notions of moral reform gained popularity, police were challenged to take a less tolerant approach. However, reformers' efforts to end the sex trade dwindled with the onset of the First World War and attitudes toward sex workers shifted drastically as responsibility for venereal disease was placed largely on women who sold sex. Using government and police records, moral reform and public health documents, and media sources such as newspapers, as well as intersectional analysis of gender, race, class, and ethnicity, this examination of Saskatchewan’s sex trade investigates the histories and social responses to the buying and selling of sex, revealing the complex and, at times, contradictory place of sex workers and the sex trade in Saskatchewan’s early history.
17

Fractured families: pathways to sex work in Nairobi, Kenya

Ross, Melanie D. 26 August 2008 (has links)
The reasons why African women become engaged in sex work have received little attention in academic research. While it is largely acknowledged that there exists a connection between entering the sex trade and poverty, not all women who are poor enter sex work. Through the use of life histories with 21 women between the ages of 18 and 42, this thesis explores the combination of factors that lead women and girls to become commercial sex workers in Nairobi, Kenya. This method provides a detailed look at initiation into sex work as it occurs over the life course for women and girls in this context. Additionally, this thesis examines how structural violence impinges on their lives, thereby increasing vulnerability to engagement in sex work. Examining the larger socio-political and economic contexts illustrates how issues such as HIV/AIDS, migrant labour, changing gender roles, the erosion of existing familial structures and gender inequities structure risk for suffering for women. These issues result in many girls losing caregiver support by being orphaned, while additionally, women are burdened with providing total economic and social support for the family in a society that has gendered economic opportunities. Both girls and women are left with few options other than the sex trade to survive.
18

Fractured families: pathways to sex work in Nairobi, Kenya

Ross, Melanie D. 26 August 2008 (has links)
The reasons why African women become engaged in sex work have received little attention in academic research. While it is largely acknowledged that there exists a connection between entering the sex trade and poverty, not all women who are poor enter sex work. Through the use of life histories with 21 women between the ages of 18 and 42, this thesis explores the combination of factors that lead women and girls to become commercial sex workers in Nairobi, Kenya. This method provides a detailed look at initiation into sex work as it occurs over the life course for women and girls in this context. Additionally, this thesis examines how structural violence impinges on their lives, thereby increasing vulnerability to engagement in sex work. Examining the larger socio-political and economic contexts illustrates how issues such as HIV/AIDS, migrant labour, changing gender roles, the erosion of existing familial structures and gender inequities structure risk for suffering for women. These issues result in many girls losing caregiver support by being orphaned, while additionally, women are burdened with providing total economic and social support for the family in a society that has gendered economic opportunities. Both girls and women are left with few options other than the sex trade to survive.
19

“Allt handlar om yta i den här världen. Att sälja in sig själv.Och att se till att tillhandahålla det köparna fantiserar om” : En litteraturstudie om hur kvinnor som säljer sex motersättning upplever sin situation inom sexhandeln / “It's all about the surface in this world. To sell yourself. And to make sure toprovide what buyers are fantasizing about¨ : A qualitative study of how women who sell sex for compensations experiencetheir situation in the sex trade

Sika, Kelly, Corneliusson, Hanna January 2022 (has links)
No description available.
20

“Det är väl bara att gå därifrån?” : - en kvalitativ studie om uppbrott ur prostitution. / “Why can you not just walk away?” : - a qualitative research about exiting prostitution.

Ekmen, Elise, Högnäs, Mirjam January 2016 (has links)
Former studies show that the break-up from prostitution can be seen as a process with several stages which the person has to go through and that there are several factors which can affect the break-up. The aim of this study is to create an understanding for and illustrate how a break-up from prostitution can look like. We have interviewed three ex-prostitutes about their own break-up and three social workers who work with helping individuals to exit prostitution. We have analyzed the material through the theory of exit process by Helen Fuch Ebaugh (1988) and through former studies. All the ex-prostitutes and the social workers in our study described the break-up from prostitution as a process. All our respondents agreed on that there are several different factors affecting a break-up from prostitution, whereof close relationships and the own motivation to make a change are the most significant ones. Formal support from professionals is also considered having an impact on the exit process as well as during the period after the break-up. In summary, the break-up process from prostitution is very complex, can be emotionally exhausting and may vary to a great extent between individuals.

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