History of Feminism
Related: About this forumWhy is paying for sex legal in so many countries? Because the laws are made by men
Like many campaigners who have personal experience of prostitution, I support the "Nordic model", which criminalises the demand for paid sexual access to people, decriminalises those who are so exploited, and offers exit routes including education and training. It can only be objected to from a standpoint that refuses to view women as fully viable humans on a par with men. The reason for this is simple: the overwhelming majority of those exploited in prostitution are female. Added to that, many are adolescent girls below the age of consent. I know from first-hand experience that very often females are prostituted before they've even reached the age of sexual consent. That was the case for me also; I was 15 years old when I was coerced into prostitution by an adult male.
From my the seven years I spent in prostitution, I also know is that most women and girls are there because of social marginalisation - with the causes ranging from educational disadvantage to outright destitution. I and the other teenage girls who prostituted themselves alongside me in the early 1990s would sometimes, but rarely, talk about how we might get out of that life. The conversations were rare because it was generally accepted that there was no way out. Had the Nordic model existed in Ireland of the 1990s, along with decriminalising us, it would have offered us help with housing, childcare, addiction and the all-important education and training so that we would have had a real and viable way out. It is both saddening and disturbing to see the level of political opposition to the only legal framework that has ever sought to address prostitution from a human rights perspective. This is simply the only law on earth that assumes, as a starting point, that prostituted persons are worth more than what the circumstances of their lives have forced them to accept.
The Nordic model is also a gender-neutral law, and rightly so. It recognises prostitution as a system of exploitation generally entered into under extreme coercion and that such exploitation should is never acceptable, regardless of a persons biological sex. This is fair and just. Prostitution is simply incompatible with the dignity of human beings. But while we are talking about biological sex, lets not forget which sex is responsible for the demand for prostitution in the first place. According to Detective Inspector Simon Haggstrom of the Stockholm Police Prostitution Unit, in the 15 years since the sex buyers law has been implemented in Sweden, not one woman has been found paying for sex. Not one.
http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2014/11/why-paying-sex-legal-so-many-countries-because-laws-are-made-men
Shivering Jemmy
(900 posts)I have never really seen the difference between porn and prostitution. In both cases someone is selling sexual access to their bodies.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)of women and men's bodies, whereas prostitution is a direct, large scale commodification.
Shivering Jemmy
(900 posts)Many European countries don't.
jakeXT
(10,575 posts)a translator of manga comics.
Sweden to tighten child pornography laws
Published: 02 Nov 2009 14:39 GMT+01:00
Sweden's government is meeting on Monday to bring forward new legislation that will prohibit the viewing of child pornography. The centre-right government is also hoping to put in place more rigorous age restrictions regarding the production of pornographic material.
http://www.thelocal.se/20091102/23022
Published: 15 Sep 2010 08:53 GMT+02:00
The investigation, which relied on assistance of experts from the polices special taskforce on child pornography, came after the library was reported last year for violating Swedens laws prohibiting the possession and distribution of child pornography.
The library, knows as Kungliga Biblioteket (The Royal Library), has now asked for guidance from the government on how to proceed.
We want to know if our librarians are breaking some law when they lend out material featuring child pornography, library spokesperson Rickard Carlsson told Sveriges Television (SVT).
...
The collection at the library was built up in the years between 1971, when the possession, distribution and display of child pornography was legalized in Sweden, and 1980, when the law was repealed.
http://www.thelocal.se/20100915/29004
16 June 2012
A Swedish translator of Japanese-style manga comics has been cleared of child pornography charges in a case that has sparked debate about whether cartoon characters can be considered people.
Simon Lundstroem had appealed to the Supreme Court against his conviction for possessing 39 sexual images depicting young-looking characters drawn in manga style.
Manga is a hugely popular genre in Japan. There are magazines for children, adults and senior citizens, and titles targeted at special interest groups such as golfers, businessmen and new mothers.
"There's a lot of sex," says Fredrik Stroemberg, chairman of Sweden's cartoon association, Seriefraemjandet, "and a lot of violence." A small number of titles have explicit content.
Child pornography is illegal in Sweden but it was not clear whether the definition extended to cartoon characters.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-18430725
CTyankee
(65,387 posts)be dropped off to her by her ex two weekends of each month. On the other weekends she would have visits from men who were basically her customers for sex. She wasn't too secretive about it and since we live in a very liberal city we were all nice to her and treated her just like we would any neighbor. She moved away after having some kind of psychotic break and spending some time at Yale-New Haven Hospital. I felt so bad for her and often wonder what happened to her.
Tuesday Afternoon
(56,912 posts)Last edited Thu Nov 20, 2014, 02:14 PM - Edit history (1)
#some.women and #some.men LOVE this line of WORK ...