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Sex work - Other countries/regions |
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International Labour Organisation/International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (ILO/IPEC). (2001). Tanzania, Children in Prostitution: A Rapid Assessment. Geneva: ILO. 77 p. The first research ever carried out in Tanzania is about children's engagement in prostitution and also about incidences of local trafficking of children for the purpose of domestic and commercial sexual work. http://www.ilo.org/public/english/standards/ipec/simpoc/tanzania/ra/prost.pdf |
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988.82 kb) 
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Lisborg, A. (1999). Bodies across Borders: Prostitution Related Migration from Thailand to Denmark. 29 p. "This paper explores the migration patterns and living conditions among Thai sex-workers in Denmark. It reveals a unique and extremely gender-selective migration pattern and an increase of tenfold of Thai migrant sex-workers, in less than ten years. It is illustrated how the migrant sex-workers have migrated under various circumstances, and how their differences in living conditions often is related to the migration method used. While some women are victims of trafficking and work in slavery-like conditions, many of the prostitution-related migrants typically are quite goal-oriented women who understand the potential implications of their decisions, and still are willing to run the risk and voluntarily migrate in order to work as sex-workers abroad." http://www.childtrafficking.com/ |
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116 kb) 
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Pedersen, W., Larsen, C.J. (2005). Exchange, love, abuse. Sexuality among adolescents on the fringe. 199 p. ”The background for this report is recent research on adolescents who sell sex. The studies have brought to light a long range of experiences that involve the exchange of sex for other goods, but that do not easily fit into fixed categories. Sometimes terms like "prostitution" or "survival sex" seem appropriate, other times they do not. In addition we wanted to study relations and situations in which sex seemed to play a problematic role. The report is based on 60 in-depth interviews with adolescents and young adults. The selected samples were not based on sex sale experiences, but on characteristics that have been indicated - by quantitative studies - to give increased risk of sex sale.” In Norwegian. http://www.childtrafficking.com |
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1060.14 kb) 
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POPPY Project (2007).Streets Apart: Outdoor Prostitution in London. 63 p. Streets Apart critically examines the off-street sex industry. It highlights the urgent need for an expansion of the support services available to women involved in prostitution and the crucial need for educational and criminal justice deterrents directed towards buyers and potential buyers. http://www.eaves4women.co.uk/POPPY_Project/Documents/Recent_Reports/StreetsApart__14Jun07doc.pdf |
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183.56 kb) 
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POPPY Project (2006). No Escape? An Investigation into London's Service Provision for Women Involved in the Commercial Sex Industry. 76 p. This study investigates the needs of women involved in the commercial sex industry by exploring the work of over 200 projects working with women who sell sex in London. The information given shows clear gaps in service provision and highlights areas where improved and appropriately targeted services would increase safety for those currently involved in the sex industry and enable increasing numbers of women to exit. http://www.eaves4women.co.uk/POPPY_Project/Documents/Recent_Reports/poppysurveyfinal.pdf |
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