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”den stigmatiserar mig bara ännu mer” : en fallstudie kring den svenska sexköpslagens effekter på sexarbetande kvinnors liv

Fahd, Isabelle LU (2011) MRSK60 20111
Human Rights Studies
Abstract
Sweden was the first country in the world to introduce a law that criminalized the buyer of sexual services but not the seller. The aim of this study is to contribute with an understanding of how female sex workers rights are being affected by the Swedish sex purchase law. To reach a conclusion, the author of this thesis tries to sort out which norms, beliefs, attitudes and/or values that are hidden behind the surface of the Swedish sex purchase law and its stated objectives, and to further figure out in which ways these are problematic from a human rights perspective.

To get an understanding of how sex workers rights are being affected by the law, a qualitative in depth interview with a previous sex worker was conducted in April 2011.... (More)
Sweden was the first country in the world to introduce a law that criminalized the buyer of sexual services but not the seller. The aim of this study is to contribute with an understanding of how female sex workers rights are being affected by the Swedish sex purchase law. To reach a conclusion, the author of this thesis tries to sort out which norms, beliefs, attitudes and/or values that are hidden behind the surface of the Swedish sex purchase law and its stated objectives, and to further figure out in which ways these are problematic from a human rights perspective.

To get an understanding of how sex workers rights are being affected by the law, a qualitative in depth interview with a previous sex worker was conducted in April 2011. The material from this interview has been used as the main source for answering the questions of this study.

Prostitution, presented as a unitary phenomenon within Swedish politics where exploitation and oppression of women are central aspects, results in sex workers whom do not identify themselves within this definition being ignored and degraded, which is happening with the interviewee in this study. Although the law aims to protect sex workers, it seems to maintain and reproduce social stigma around sex workers. Old attitudes surrounding sexuality and sexual preferences can be seen as a root to sex workers being degraded in the Swedish society. This study also suggests that sexual stigma and censorship of sex workers can itself be seen as oppression of women, in accordance with the interviewee’s experiences. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Fahd, Isabelle LU
supervisor
organization
course
MRSK60 20111
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
sex work, sex workers, human rights, stigma, discrimination, female sexuality, Swedish sex purchase law, sexarbete, sexarbetare, mänskliga rättigheter, diskriminering, kvinnlig sexualitet, sexköpslagen.
language
Swedish
id
1973468
date added to LUP
2011-09-30 10:41:29
date last changed
2014-09-04 08:27:53
@misc{1973468,
  abstract     = {{Sweden was the first country in the world to introduce a law that criminalized the buyer of sexual services but not the seller. The aim of this study is to contribute with an understanding of how female sex workers rights are being affected by the Swedish sex purchase law. To reach a conclusion, the author of this thesis tries to sort out which norms, beliefs, attitudes and/or values that are hidden behind the surface of the Swedish sex purchase law and its stated objectives, and to further figure out in which ways these are problematic from a human rights perspective.

To get an understanding of how sex workers rights are being affected by the law, a qualitative in depth interview with a previous sex worker was conducted in April 2011. The material from this interview has been used as the main source for answering the questions of this study.

Prostitution, presented as a unitary phenomenon within Swedish politics where exploitation and oppression of women are central aspects, results in sex workers whom do not identify themselves within this definition being ignored and degraded, which is happening with the interviewee in this study. Although the law aims to protect sex workers, it seems to maintain and reproduce social stigma around sex workers. Old attitudes surrounding sexuality and sexual preferences can be seen as a root to sex workers being degraded in the Swedish society. This study also suggests that sexual stigma and censorship of sex workers can itself be seen as oppression of women, in accordance with the interviewee’s experiences.}},
  author       = {{Fahd, Isabelle}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{”den stigmatiserar mig bara ännu mer” : en fallstudie kring den svenska sexköpslagens effekter på sexarbetande kvinnors liv}},
  year         = {{2011}},
}