The 1999 Swedish ban on sex-purchase has been hotly debated in politics, the media, and academia. This study focuses on the attention the ban has received as an unprecedented approach to governing prostitution, the highly polarised political environment in which it exists, and the multiple political-legal contradictions it displays. Using material gathered through a multisited method from 2009 through 2019, social anthropologist Petra Östergren shows that the offence is a variant of traditional anti-prostitution laws and argues that its distinctive and puzzling features are comprehensible within the framework of morality politics. The thesis refines the concept of morality politics, offering new insights into how issues like prostitution, homosexuality, abortion, and drug use are perceived, discussed, and governed in liberal democracies. Östergren suggests these are ‘consensual crimes’ rooted in religious notions of sin and seen as risks to social order. These issues are typically addressed by repressive, restrictive, or integrative policy models that seek either to reform those engaged in marginalised practices or to grant them civil rights. The study demonstrates that Sweden’s ambivalent civic and legal stance toward sex workers reflects an exclusionary logic, linking it to the historically subordinate status of women’s labour and state punishment of ‘sinners’.
                                
                                Les mer
                              
                                  The 1999 Swedish ban on sex-purchase has been hotly debated in politics, the media, and academia. This study focuses on the attention the ban has received as an unprecedented approach to governing prostitution, the highly polarised political environment in which it exists, and the multiple political-legal contradictions it displays. Using material
                                
                                Les mer
                              Produktdetaljer
ISBN
                    
            9789181041590
      
                  Publisert
                     2025-04-04 
                  Utgiver
                    Lunds universitet, Media-Tryck
                  Vekt
                     482 gr
                  Høyde
                     239 mm
                  Bredde
                     169 mm
                  Dybde
                     13 mm
                  Språk
                    
  Product language
              Engelsk
          Format
                    
  Product format
              Heftet
          Antall sider
                     216
                  Forfatter
                                              
                                          