首页> 外文期刊>Social science and medicine >Risky health environments: women sex workers' struggles to find safe, secure and non-exploitative housing in Canada's poorest postal code.
【24h】

Risky health environments: women sex workers' struggles to find safe, secure and non-exploitative housing in Canada's poorest postal code.

机译:危险的健康环境:性工作者在加拿大最贫穷的邮政编码中寻找安全,有保障和非剥削性的住房的努力。

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

This study explored low-income and transitional housing environments of women sex workers and their role in shaping agency and power in negotiating safety and sexual risk reduction in Vancouver, Canada. A series of 12 focus group discussions were conducted with 73 women currently involved in street-based sex work. These women were purposively sampled for a range of experiences living in low-income housing environments, including homeless shelters, transitional housing, and co-ed and women-only single-room occupancy (SRO) hotels. Drawing on the risk environment framework and theoretical constructs of gender, agency and power, analyses demonstrate that women continue to be vulnerable to violence and sexual and economic exploitation and have reduced ability to negotiate risk reduction resulting from the physical, structural and social environments of current dominant male-centred housing models. Within the physical environment, women described inhabitable housing conditions in SROs with infestations of bedbugs and rats, leading women to even more transitional housing options such as shelters and couch-surfing. In many cases, this resulted in their economic exploitation and increased sexual risk. Within the structural environment, enforcement of curfews and guest policies forced women to accept risky clients to meet curfew, or work outdoors where their ability to negotiate safety and condom use were limited. Certain policies promoted women's agency and mitigated their ability to reduce risks when selling sex. These included flexible curfews and being able to bring clients home. The social environments of co-ed single-room occupancy hotels resulted in repeated violence by male residents and discrimination by male building staff. Women-only shelters and SROs facilitated 'enabling environments' where women developed support systems with other working women that resulted in safer work practices. The narratives expressed in this study reveal the critical need for public health interventions and safer supportive housing to account for the daily lived experiences of women sex workers.
机译:这项研究探讨了女性性工作者的低收入和过渡性住房环境,以及在加拿大温哥华谈判安全和减少性风险谈判中她们在塑造代理机构和权力方面的作用。与目前参与街头性工作的73名妇女进行了12次焦点小组讨论。目的是对这些妇女进行抽样,以获取在低收入住房环境中生活的各种经验,包括无家可归者收容所,过渡性住房以及男女同校和仅限女性的单人房(SRO)酒店。分析表明,利用风险环境框架和性别,代理和权力的理论构架,妇女继续易受暴力以及性剥削和经济剥削,并且由于当前的物质,结构和社会环境而降低谈判风险的能力下降以男性为主导的住房模式。在自然环境中,妇女描述了SRO中的居住环境,其中臭虫和老鼠的侵扰使妇女选择了更多的过渡性住房选择,例如庇护所和沙发冲浪。在许多情况下,这导致了他们的经济剥削并增加了性风险。在结构性环境中,实施宵禁和客人政策迫使妇女接受有风险的客人去宵禁,或者在谈判安全和使用避孕套的能力受到限制的户外工作。某些政策促进了妇女的代理权,并降低了她们降低卖淫时的风险的能力。这些措施包括灵活的宵禁并能够将客户带回家。男女同房的单人房旅馆的社会环境导致男性居民屡屡遭受暴力,并受到男性建筑工人的歧视。仅限女性的庇护所和SRO促进了“扶持性环境”,妇女与其他在职妇女共同开发了支持系统,从而产生了更安全的工作习惯。这项研究中的叙述表明,迫切需要公共卫生干预措施和更安全的支持性住房,以说明女性性工作者的日常生活。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号