Author(s) |
Scott, John
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Publication Date |
2011
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Abstract |
Accounts of the governance of prostitution have typically argued that prostitutes are, in one way or another, stigmatised social outcasts. There is a persistent claim that power has operated to dislocate or banish the prostitute from the community in order to silence, isolate, hide, restrict, or punish. I argue that another position may be tenable; that is, power has operated to locate prostitution within the social. Power does not operate to 'de-socialise' prostitution, but has in recent times operated increasingly to normalise it. Power does not demarcate prostitutes from the social according to some binary mechanics of difference, but works instead according to a principle of differentiation which seeks to connect, include, circulate and enable specific prostitute populations within the social. In this paper I examine how prostitution has been singled out for public attention as a socio-political problem and governed accordingly. The concept of governmentality is used to think through such issues, providing, as it does, a non-totalising and non-reductionist account of rule. It is argued that a combination of self-regulatory and punitive practices developed during modernity to manage socially problematic prostitute populations.
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Citation |
Current Issues in Criminal Justice, 23(1), p. 53-72
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ISSN |
2206-9542
1034-5329
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Link | |
Language |
en
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Publisher |
University of Sydney, Sydney Institute of Criminology
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Title |
Governing Prostitution: Differentiating the Bad from the Bad
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Type of document |
Journal Article
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Entity Type |
Publication
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