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The Complexities of Supply & Demand: Intimacy, Sexual Labour & Commerce Dr Teela Sanders The Complexities of Supply & Demand: Intimacy, Sexual Labour & Commerce Dr Teela Sanders University of Leeds t. l. m. sanders@leeds. ac. uk

Drawing on sociological studies • Ten month study • Observations and interviews in brothels, Drawing on sociological studies • Ten month study • Observations and interviews in brothels, street, escorts in UK • 300 people across industry • What are risks? • How are they managed? • Sex as ‘work’ – what this means ?

Other side of the coin… • Interviews with 50 men • Self selecting sample Other side of the coin… • Interviews with 50 men • Self selecting sample • Observations of Internet message boards • Motivations, Experiences, Meanings, Understandings of Buying sex

Is the oldest profession the most adaptable? “Why is it that a practice so Is the oldest profession the most adaptable? “Why is it that a practice so thoroughly disapproved, so widely outlawed in Western civilization, can yet flourish so universally? ’ (Davis, 1938: 744) American Sociological Review

Outline of presentation • The law, informal economies and criminalisation • UK policy – Outline of presentation • The law, informal economies and criminalisation • UK policy – victimhood narrative and criminalisation of sex workers / ‘Tackling Demand’ Review • Push & Pull factors that engage men • Is there such a thing as intimacy in commercial sex? • Supply chains – why women enter into sex industry • Respectability, class, embourgeoisiement • Consumerism and late capitalism

Recent Policy Developments l l l Being Outside: constructing a response to street prostitution Recent Policy Developments l l l Being Outside: constructing a response to street prostitution (Scottish Executive, 2004) Prostitution (Public Places) (Scotland)Act 2007 Paying the Price (Home Office, 2004) Co-ordinated Prostitution Strategy (Home Office, 2006) New ‘Tackling Demand’ Review (July 2008) Criminal Justice and Immigration Bill (2008): l l l Section 71: Removal of “common prostitute” Section 72: Orders to promote rehabilitation Compulsory Rehabilitation Orders

Coordinated Prostitution Strategy 2006 Rejected managed zones – condoning l Rejected licensed brothel system Coordinated Prostitution Strategy 2006 Rejected managed zones – condoning l Rejected licensed brothel system l Eradication of street prostitution through… l ‘Exiting’ and/or criminalisation of sex workers - ASBOs l l l ‘Tackling Demand’ Trafficking and sexual exploitation Move from victim to offender Move from fines to ASBOs / imprisonment Increase in sex workers sent to prison

‘Tipplezones’ in Holland ‘Tipplezones’ in Holland

Redefining who is the ‘problem’ o o o 1980’s + men who buy sex Redefining who is the ‘problem’ o o o 1980’s + men who buy sex problematised Increase in laws against ‘the kerbcrawler’ 1985 Sexual Offences Act - shift in who was the problem 2001 Criminal Justice & Police Act - kerbcrawling an arrestable offence 2003 Criminal Justice Act - conditional cautioning Peak between 2000 -4: 993 men arrested (2002)

Coordinated Prostitution Strategy: Tackling Demand o o o Enforcement of existing laws for kerbcrawling Coordinated Prostitution Strategy: Tackling Demand o o o Enforcement of existing laws for kerbcrawling Addressing concerns from communities Informal warning / court diversion / prosecution Crackdowns, zero tolerance decoys, supporting naming and shaming, media coverage, driving licenses revoked, fines, rehabilitation programmes High profile naming and shaming – Aberdeen / Leeds: impact on families? ? 2008 – another review of ‘tackling demand’ with view to criminalising men who buy

Yet the UK market blossoms • Street beats still exist • Website where men Yet the UK market blossoms • Street beats still exist • Website where men post reports about their commercial sexual encounters in the UK • 80, 000 reports written since 1999 • £ 10 million expenditure • Lap dancing annual turnover of £ 300 million • Private parlours - £ 5 million – same as cinema expenditure • Male migrant Sex markets In london

Whether legal, illegal, or somewhere in the middle Sex industries are thriving, expanding, adapting Whether legal, illegal, or somewhere in the middle Sex industries are thriving, expanding, adapting in late capitalism across the globe. WHY?

Who buys sex and why ? Push Factors n Stages of life – ritual Who buys sex and why ? Push Factors n Stages of life – ritual & circumstance n Older men and sexuality n Unsatisfactory sexual relationships n Unease with conventional dating etiquette n Emotional needs beyond sex n ‘Time out’ & quality of life in ‘overwork’ culture – acceptability of buying sex in some occupational cultures

Performing the ‘male client’ role § 5 key features of the traditional male sexual Performing the ‘male client’ role § 5 key features of the traditional male sexual script that are also prominent in commercial sexual relationships between regulars and sex workers. (Sanders, 2008) § role of communication § courtship rituals § sexual familiarity § mutual ‘satisfaction’ § development of ‘friendship’ and emotional connections

Social factors: opportunity and change Pull factors: 1 ¡ Social environment presents opportunity ¡ Social factors: opportunity and change Pull factors: 1 ¡ Social environment presents opportunity ¡ Internet ¡ Travel / tourism ¡ Accessibility and availability ¡ Pleasure saturated culture (Illouz, 1997) ¡ Shifting acceptability to buy sex. ¡ Reduced stigma Pull factors: 2 ¡ ‘Sex as leisure’ (Hawkes, 1996) ¡ ¡ ¡ Sexualization of the night time economy Fantasy as corporate strategy Mc. Donaldization of sex industry (Hausbeck & Brents, 2002) …… ‘

Who works in the sex industry? Supply Low wages for long hours OR n Who works in the sex industry? Supply Low wages for long hours OR n Higher wages for less hours n Mainstream economy for migrant workers n Rational decision making process n Many reasons for entering n Single parents n Students n Fast money / debt n Sex as ‘work’ Sexual labour n Emotional labour n (Hochschild, 1979) Bodily capital – not selling ‘themselves’ but services n Women exploiting their sexuality / femininity n Selling a fantasy within commercially bounded contract n Exploitation within this meaning: working conditions / stigma n

Demand & Supply Interact l Abolitionist arguments fail to understand the interactions between supply, Demand & Supply Interact l Abolitionist arguments fail to understand the interactions between supply, demand the market l Persistent inequalities and opportunities / entrepreneurship for women ($£) = supply l Persistent push and pull factors for men = demand l Consumerism as key force in late capitalism: 1) Commodification of sexuality 2) ‘Mainstreaming’ of sex and commerce

So, why do Western civilizations tolerate the sex industry? • Capitalism = economic framework So, why do Western civilizations tolerate the sex industry? • Capitalism = economic framework that commodifies everything • The market/profit most powerful dynamic in cultural change? • Sex, bodies, sexuality, pleasure are not exempt • Respectability, professionalization, embourgeoisiement ensures expansion & mainstreaming • Tension between ‘the market’ and ‘morals’ BUT shifts in economic place of the sex industry through mainstreaming means that social and cultural norms adapt as capitalism embraces sexual and bodily commodification. The universality of a LESS disapproved of practice

References • • • Bernstein, E. 2001 'The Meaning of the Purchase : Desire, References • • • Bernstein, E. 2001 'The Meaning of the Purchase : Desire, Demand the Commerce of Sex', Ethnography 2(3): 389 -420. — 2007 'Sex work for the Middle Classes', Sexualities 10(4): 473 -488 Brents, B. and Hausbeck, K. 2007 'Marketing Sex: U. S Legal Brothels and Late Capitalist Consumption', Sexualities 10(4). Davis, K. 1937 'The Sociology of Prostitution', American Journal of Sociology 2(5): 744 -755. Hausbeck, K. and Brents, B. G. 2002 'Mc. Donaldization of the Sex Industries? The Business of Sex', in G. Ritzer (ed) Mc. Donaldization: The Reader: Pine Forge Press. Hawkes, G. 1996 A Sociology of Sex and Sexuality, Buckingham: Open University Press. Hochschild, A. 1979 'Emotion Work, Feeling Rules and Social Structure', American Journal of Sociology 85(3): 551 -75. Illouz, E. 1997 Consuming the Romantic Utopia, Berkeley: University of California Press. Sanders , T. 2008 'Male Sexual Scripts: Intimacy, Sexuality and Pleasure in the Purchase of Commercial Sex, ' Sociology 42(1).