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Making It Work: The Prostitute's Rights Movement in Perspective (Social Problems and Social Issues)

Making It Work: The Prostitute's Rights Movement in Perspective (Social Problems and Social Issues)

List Price: $22.95
Your Price: $22.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A must-read for feminist scholars!
Review: Jenness provides an in-depth look at the prostitutes' rights movement by taking both a social movement and a deviance approach. Jenness structures her work around seeing prostitution as a social problem - a social problem different organizations have tried to lay claim to for the past 200 years. Her main focus is on COYOTE, the movement's most active and visible actor since 1973, but she also spends considerable time on other influences, from the 19th century social purists to the women's movement today. In a wonderfully unbiased and detached manner, Jenness presents the conflicts that have arisen in both the prostitutes' rights movement and the women's movement over this issue. Should prostitution be eliminated or recognized as a profession? Are prostitutes to be pitied or respected as artisans?

I give this book four stars because of its content and thorough research. Jenness' writing style can be difficult, so I recommend three or four sittings to complete the book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A must-read for feminist scholars!
Review: Jenness provides an in-depth look at the prostitutes' rights movement by taking both a social movement and a deviance approach. Jenness structures her work around seeing prostitution as a social problem - a social problem different organizations have tried to lay claim to for the past 200 years. Her main focus is on COYOTE, the movement's most active and visible actor since 1973, but she also spends considerable time on other influences, from the 19th century social purists to the women's movement today. In a wonderfully unbiased and detached manner, Jenness presents the conflicts that have arisen in both the prostitutes' rights movement and the women's movement over this issue. Should prostitution be eliminated or recognized as a profession? Are prostitutes to be pitied or respected as artisans?

I give this book four stars because of its content and thorough research. Jenness' writing style can be difficult, so I recommend three or four sittings to complete the book.


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