AI Article Synopsis

  • Street sex work is characterized by power imbalances, with workers facing marginalization based on race, class, and gender, but they still demonstrate agency rather than being entirely powerless.
  • The study uses narratives from female street sex workers in Canada to explore the strategies they use to navigate risks associated with their work and assert their agency amidst violence.
  • The findings reveal how workers analyze customer behaviors and conditions in their work environment, employing theories about men's motivations for buying sex to make informed choices about which customers to engage with, while also referencing dominant discourses around masculinity and the intersections of race, class, and gender.

Article Abstract

Street sex work is deeply stratified, embedded in power imbalances and inequities; workers are multiply marginalized, relative to customers, in terms of race, class and gender. At the same time, these imbalances should not be equated with worker powerlessness. In this paper, we seek to counter the existing limited and polarized conceptualizations of agency that dominate the sex work literature by providing an assessment of the ways in which female street sex workers seek to realize and exercise agency and enact strategies of resistance despite the violence ubiquitous in their work. We draw from worker narratives collected through individual and focus group interviews in five Canadian cities to highlight the nuanced and layered ways in which workers, collectively and individually, apply reasoning and argumentation to the risks represented by customers, as well as to other aspects of their working environment. Workers offered three significant theories related to which men buy sex on the street and why (some) men buy sex; we describe how they employ these to negotiate the conditions of their work, nesting our findings within a broader socio-cultural analysis of the risks workers experience as they navigate complex, highly politicized working environments. Finally, we show how workers appropriate hegemonic masculinity discourses as well as intersecting race, class and gender discourses to inform their rationales for choosing some customers over others, setting our discussion within existing literature on male sex work customers.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00224499.2020.1830260DOI Listing

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