Veuillez utiliser cette adresse pour citer ce document : https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/handle/10219/2126
Titre: Managing prostitution : the social relations of ‘help’
Auteurs: Schmidt, Christine
Mots clés: sex workers;Northeastern Ontario;Dorothy E. Smith;social/power relations
Date publié: 16-déc-2013
Éditeur: Laurentian University of Sudbury
Abstrait: This thesis explores the social organization of ‘helping sex workers’ in Northeastern Ontario from the standpoint of sex workers or former sex workers. It is based on twelve (12) qualitative interviews with sex workers and former sex workers between the years 2002-2003. This thesis engages the feminist research framework as developed by Dorothy E Smith, a feminist sociologist. Smiths’ ontological and epistemological framework conceptualizes knowledge as socially produced and mediated by social/power relations. This is a theoretical framework that has the potential to explore the social standpoint of persons labeled ‘sex worker’ by examining social/power relations from their standpoint and by problematizing claims of the universality of knowledge and ‘truth’. Overwhelmingly sex workers identified ‘help’ as a series of stigmatizing processes that were triggered upon the ‘moment of identification’ of being a sex worker. These series of stigmatizing processes were embedded in social courses of action undertaken by social service agencies and the police. This is important research as claims to ‘helping’ sex workers by social service agencies and the subsequent social relations this creates for sex workers are rarely examined in Canada from the standpoint of sex workers.
URI: https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/2126
Apparaît dans les collections:Master's Theses
Sociology / Sociologie - Master's Theses

Fichiers dans cet item:
Fichier Description TailleFormat 
Schmidt_Christine_Master_Thesis .pdf1.82 MBAdobe PDFThumbnail
Parcourir/Ouvrir


Tous les documents dans DSpace sont protégés par copyright, avec tous droits réservés.