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Women's Sex-Toy Parties: Technology, Orgasm, and Commodification
Archived version from NCDOCKS Institutional Repository http://libres.uncg.edu/ir/asu/ McCaughey, Martha, and Christina French.(2001) “Women’s Sex-Toy Parties: Technology, Orgasm, and Commodification,” Sexuality and Culture 5:3:77-96. (ISSN: 1095-5143) The version of record is available from http://www.springer.com (September 2001) Women’s Sex-Toy Parties: Technology, Orgasm, and Commodification Martha McCaughey and Christina French ABSTRACT: This article presents participant-observation research from five female-only sex- toy parties. We situate the sale of sex toys in the context of in-home marketing to women, the explosion of a sex industry, and the emergence of lifestyle and body politics. We explore the significance of sex toys for women as marketed in female-only contexts, paying particular attention to the similarities and differences with Tupperware’s marketing of plastic that promises happiness to women. We argue that sex-toy sales follow the exact patterns of Tupperware sales but, since the artifacts sold are for the bedroom rather than the kitchen, foster an even greater sense of intimacy between the women— which has both positive and negative consequences for thinking critically about the commodification of sexuality, bodies, and lifestyles in our capitalist culture. Vibrators and other sex toys constitute the technological route to a self- reflexive body project of female orgasm. We ask to what extent such a body project, achieved primarily through an individualistic, capitalistic consumption model, can offer a critique of -
Sex and the City: Branding, Gender and the Commodification of Sex Consumption in Contemporary Retailing
Sex and the city: Branding, gender and the commodification of sex consumption in contemporary retailing Martin, A. and Crewe, L. (2016) Urban Studies Abstract This paper explores the changing spatiality of the sex retail industry in England and Wales, from highly regulated male orientated sex shops, pushed to the legislative margins of the city and social respectability, towards the emergence of unregulated female orientated ‘erotic boutiques’ located visibly in city centres. This is achieved through an exploration of the oppositional binaries of perceptions of sex shops as dark, dirty, male orientated, and ‘seedy’ and erotic boutiques as light, female orientated and stylish, showing how such discourses are embedded in the physical space, design and marketing of the stores and the products sold within them. More specifically, the paper analyses how female orientated sex stores utilise light, colour and design to create an ‘upscaling’ of sexual consumerism and reflects on what the emergence of up-scale female spaces for sexual consumption in the central city might mean in terms of theorisations of the intersectionality between agency, power, gender and class. The paper thus considers how the shifting packaging and presentation of sex-product consumption in the contemporary city alters both its acceptability and visibility. Keywords Consumption, Retailing, Sex Shop, Brands, The City, Space, Gender 1 1. Introduction One of the most interesting developments in the recent study of sexuality has been an increasing focus on its spatial dimensions. In this paper we address the spatial, social and gendered contours of sex shops. This is significant as part of a broader project to theorise both the emotional and the corporeal dimensions of the consuming body, and its classed and gendered composition. -
130789 Committee Item No
File No. --------130789 Committee Item No. 2 Board Item No. ------61.o COMMITTEE/BOARD OF SUPERVISORS AGENDA PACKET CONTENTS LIST Committee: Government Audit and Oversight Date October 24, 2013 Board of Supervisors Meeting Date NoYem\,er 5, !Z01S Cmte.Board D D Motion D Resolution Ordinance i I Legislative Digest D D Budget and Legislative Analyst Report D Youth Commission Report jg] Introduction Form i ~ Department/Agency Cover Letter and/or Report D D MOU D D Grant Information Form D D Grant Budget D D Subcontract Budget D D Contract/Agreement D D Form 126 - Ethics Commission D D Award Letter D Application ~ ~ Public Correspondence OTHER · (Use back side if additional space is needed) Categorical Exemption Stamp, dtd 9/11/13 i ~ Small Business Commission Recommendation, dtd 9/9/13 D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D Completed by:~E"'"""ri-'ca~D~a_.y~ri'"""""t ______Date October 17, 2013 Completed by: Ali~ Miller Date Oo.tober ~1, 201?;> 6235 AMENDED IN COMMITIEE FILE NO. 130789 10/3/2013 ORulNANCE NO. 1 [Health Code - Licensing and Regulation of Massage i=stablishments and Practitioners] 2 3 Ordinance af'!lending the Health Code to require massage practitioners licensed by San 4 Francisco to wear photo identification cards when working; deny Massage 5 Establishment permits to applicants convicted of specified crimes; to provide an 6 appeal process for persons denied a Massage Establishment permit; to establish 7 health and safety requirements for all Massage Establishments; to establish penalties 8 for violations of Article 29 governing Massage Practitioners and Massage 9 Establishments; to require notice of violations be sent to the owner(s) of property 10 where Massage Establishments are located; and making environmental findings. -
Human Trafficking in Illicit Massage Businesses About Polaris
Human Trafficking in Illicit Massage Businesses About Polaris Polaris is a leader in the global fight to eradicate modern slavery. Named after the North Star that guided slaves to freedom in the United States, Polaris systemically disrupts the human trafficking networks that rob human beings of their lives and their freedom. Our comprehensive model puts victims at the center of what we do — helping survivors restore their freedom, preventing more victims, and leveraging data and technology to pursue traffickers wherever they operate. Polaris PO Box 65323 Washington, DC 20035 202-790-6300 [email protected] www.polarisproject.org 2 Table of Contents Letter from Rochelle Keyhan, Director, Disruption Strategies, Polaris 2 Acknowledgements 4 Special Acknowledgments: Service Providers 5 Introduction 7 SECTION 1: UNDERSTANDING HUMAN TRAFFICKING IN ILLICIT MASSAGE BUSINESSES 9 Overview of Illicit Massage Businesses in the United States 10 Marketing Illicit Massage Businesses to Buyers 14 Recruiting Women Into Illicit Massage Parlor Trafficking 19 Why Don’t They Just Leave? How Traffickers Use Force, Fraud and Coercion to Control Women 27 Illicit Massage Business Operations 35 SECTION 2: ENDING HUMAN TRAFFICKING IN ILLICIT MASSAGE BUSINESSES 43 A Complex Problem Requires a Multifaceted Solution 44 1. Overhauling Business Regulatory Frameworks 45 2. Unmasking Shell Companies to Reveal Business Owners 64 3. Supporting Effective, Survivor-Centered Law Enforcement 67 4. Closing Loopholes in the Commercial Real Estate Industry 72 5. Ending Online Practices that Legitimize Illicit Massage Businesses 74 6. Shifting the Media Narrative to Increase Public Understanding, Decrease Public Tolerance 77 7. Working Together to Ensure Victims Receive Robust, Culturally-Competent Services 81 Conclusion 85 Methodology 87 Polaris | Human Trafficking in Illicit Massage Businesses Letter from Rochelle Keyhan Director, Disruption Strategies, Polaris Dear Readers, I even had the chance to assess whether they The United Nations might be trafficking estimates that more victims. -
Regulations on Sex Toy Industry in Europe
Vol. 16, 2021 A new decade for social changes ISSN 2668-7798 www.techniumscience.com 9 772668 779000 Technium Social Sciences Journal Vol. 16, 168-174, February, 2021 ISSN: 2668-7798 www.techniumscience.com Regulations on Sex Toy Industry in Europe Yeshwant Naik Senior Researcher, Faculty of Law, University of Muenster, Germany [email protected] Abstract. The European sex toy market is witnessing a strategic sales growth. The lockdown to contain the Corona Pandemic situation is boosting the market scenario. Countries such as the UK, Germany, France, Italy, and Spain are key growing countries driving the demand for sex toys in Europe. Against this background, this article explores the sex toy industry in Europe and the few laws that govern it. It discusses that a lack of regulation of these products has allowed manufacturers to exploit the inexpensive but highly toxic materials used in the making of sex toys to the detriment of consumers, and the implications inclined towards improving the protection of consumers in Europe. Keywords. Industry, Sex Toy, Law, Europe Introduction A sex toy is an item that is mostly utilized to ease human sexual pleasure, such as vibrator or dildo. Many of these toys are made in the resemblance of human genitals. They can also be non-vibrating or vibrating. The word sex toy may, too, include sex furniture and BDSM apparatus. In European countries like Germany, Denmark, and Holland, safety regulations on the sex toy industry do not exist. This permits the manufacturers to manufacture goods without any limits of reporting the chemical or the material utilized in the product (Döring & Poeschl, 2019). -
Sex Businesses in San Francisco: Where They Are and How the City Should Guide Where They Should Be
Sex Businesses in San Francisco: Where They Are and How the City Should Guide Where They Should Be URBP 298 Research Proposal by Seon Joo Kim Fall 2007 1. Audience Members of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors and planners in the City of San Francisco are the target audience for my report. This up-to-date analysis on sex businesses will increase their understanding on the current match (or mismatch) between regulations and realities, providing them with a springboard to explore strategies to minimize these businesses’ negative impacts on neighborhoods in the City. Although this report will focus on civil, not criminal, regulation of lawful sex businesses,1 this report will be a useful reference for the City’s Police Department as they work closely with the Planning Department on overseeing sex businesses’ initiation and operation. I also hope that those concerned with the presence of sex businesses, such as the general public and planners and policy makers in other cities, will gain a solid understanding of this sensitive and complex, yet largely overlooked, subject. Such an understanding, coupled with regulatory recommendations, will give practical insights on how to approach generally unwanted yet unavoidable elements in a neighborhood without disregarding their raison d'être. 2. Background Definition of Sex Businesses. A comprehensive planning advisory report on regulating sex businesses, published by the American Planning Association, defines “sex business” as a collective term including a range of different types of businesses, -
Massage Brothels and the Sex Trafficking of Chinese Women
1391 Unseen and Unforgiving: Massage Brothels and the Sex Trafficking of Chinese Women Angela Li Abstract: In recognition of the thousands of Asian women who are sexually trafficked from China into the United States each year, I decided to research the historical roots of sexual trafficking and the current conditions that the victims face. Historical and ongoing marginalization of communities of color into urban slums have created a foundation for illegal trafficking that is largely visible in the public eye, but the actual victims remain invisible. Current laws that are meant to help victims of sexual trafficking lack sensitivity in the intersectionality of culture, gender, and sexuality. To help victims of sexual trafficking is to put their narratives in the forefront of discussion and to give them the specialized attention that community grassroots organizations like the Garden of Hope have done. Keywords: sexual trafficking, Chinese women, massage parlor, immigration, ethnic enclaves 140 Angela Li Introduction In November 2017, a 38-year-old woman named Song Yang, also known as SiSi, fell from the fourth-floor balcony of a massage parlor and died on 40th Road, a busy commercial street in Flushing, New York (Barry and Singer 2019). Just as ubiquitous as the Chinese restaurants with roasted duck on display on the street are the massage parlors offering sex-for-money services. SiSi’s death might have been unique, but her situation is not; she is just one of thousands of Chinese women who are trafficked into the United States to become pawns in the massive underground sex economy which has over nine thousand parlors and an annual revenue of $2.5 billion (“Human Trafficking Report” 2018, 10). -
This Is an Author Produced Version of a Paper Published in Psychology & Sexuality
This is an author produced version of a paper published in Psychology & Sexuality. This paper has been peer-reviewed but does not include the final publisher proof-corrections or journal pagination. Citation for the published paper: Carlström, Charlotta. (2017). Gender equal BDSM practice : a Swedish paradox?. Psychology & Sexuality, vol. 8, issue 4, p. null URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/19419899.2017.1383302 Publisher: Routledge This document has been downloaded from MUEP (https://muep.mah.se) / DIVA (https://mau.diva-portal.org). Gender equal BDSM Practice – a Swedish Paradox? Charlotta Carlström, PhD. Department of Social Work. Centre for Sexology and Sexuality Studies, CSS. Malmö University, SE-205 06 Malmö. [email protected] +46 72 508 93 10 1 Abstract In this article I examine power and BDSM, i.e. Bondage and Discipline, Dominance and Submission, and Sadism and Masochism within Swedish society. The main research question is: How do practitioners relate to power, gender and consent in Swedish society, which has been characterised by a long tradition of gender equality? The study is based on 29 in-depth interviews with self-defined BDSM practitioners and ethnographic fieldwork in Swedish BDSM communities. The article shows that there is a strong preoccupation of gender and equality among Swedish practitioners. They express gender awareness, and problematise the practice in relation to societal power structures. For BDSM to fit into a society with a strong egalitarian discourse like Sweden, the practitioners need to reconcile BDSM and gender equality. To defend an interest in BDSM, the practitioners emphasise the voluntariness, the central role of consent, and the defined staging in the practices. -
Substantive Due Process, Equal Protection, and Criminalizing Sex Toys Richard Glover
Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology Volume 100 Article 6 Issue 2 Spring Spring 2010 Can't Buy a Thrill: Substantive Due Process, Equal Protection, and Criminalizing Sex Toys Richard Glover Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/jclc Part of the Criminal Law Commons, Criminology Commons, and the Criminology and Criminal Justice Commons Recommended Citation Richard Glover, Can't Buy a Thrill: Substantive Due Process, Equal Protection, and Criminalizing Sex Toys, 100 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 555 (2010) This Comment is brought to you for free and open access by Northwestern University School of Law Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology by an authorized editor of Northwestern University School of Law Scholarly Commons. 0091-4169/10/10002-0555 THE JOURNAL OF CRIMINAL LAW & CRIMINOLOGY Vol. 100, No. 2 Copyright © 2010 by Northwestern University, School of Law Printed in U.S.A. CAN’T BUY A THRILL:∗ SUBSTANTIVE DUE PROCESS, EQUAL PROTECTION, AND CRIMINALIZING SEX TOYS RICHARD GLOVER∗∗ This Comment explores the split between the Fifth and Eleventh Circuits on the issue of sexual privacy and statutes that ban the sale and distribution of sexual devices. Through a discussion centered around Lawrence v. Texas, the Comment argues that the statutes, although perhaps silly or repugnant, are not unconstitutional as a matter of privacy, substantive due process liberty, equal protection, nor First Amendment sexual expression. In fact, a finding of unconstitutionality could potentially do more harm than good to the greater goals of understanding female sexuality and providing sexual realization and autonomy. -
'Ulster Says No': Regulating the Consumption of Commercial Sex
‘Ulster Says No’: Regulating the consumption of commercial sex spaces and services in Northern Ireland Maginn, P. J., & Ellison, G. (2017). ‘Ulster Says No’: Regulating the consumption of commercial sex spaces and services in Northern Ireland. Urban Studies, 54(3), 806-821. https://doi.org/10.1177/0042098016674903 Published in: Urban Studies Document Version: Peer reviewed version Queen's University Belfast - Research Portal: Link to publication record in Queen's University Belfast Research Portal Publisher rights Copyright 2016 The Authors. This work is made available online in accordance with the publisher’s policies. Please refer to any applicable terms of use of the publisher. General rights Copyright for the publications made accessible via the Queen's University Belfast Research Portal is retained by the author(s) and / or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing these publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. Take down policy The Research Portal is Queen's institutional repository that provides access to Queen's research output. Every effort has been made to ensure that content in the Research Portal does not infringe any person's rights, or applicable UK laws. If you discover content in the Research Portal that you believe breaches copyright or violates any law, please contact [email protected]. Download date:04. Oct. 2021 ‘Ulster Says No’: Regulating the consumption of commercial sex spaces and services in Northern Ireland Forthcoming in Urban Studies, special issue Sex, Consumption and the City Paul J. Maginn School of Earth & Environment University of Western Australia [email protected] & Graham Ellison School of Law Queen’s University, Belfast [email protected] ABSTRACT: Commercial forms of sex such as prostitution/sex work, strip clubs and even sex shops have been the subject of much political debate and policy regulation over the last decade or so in the UK and Ireland. -
Research Article Contexts of HIV-Related Risk Behaviors Among Male Customers at Asian Massage Parlors in San Francisco
Hindawi Publishing Corporation ISRN Infectious Diseases Volume 2014, Article ID 934839, 9 pages http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/934839 Research Article Contexts of HIV-Related Risk Behaviors among Male Customers at Asian Massage Parlors in San Francisco Tooru Nemoto,1 Mariko Iwamoto,1 Elnaz Eilkhani,1 Maria Sakata,1 Mai Nhung Le,2 and Anne Morris3 1 Public Health Institute, 555 12th Street, Suite 290, Oakland, CA 94607, USA 2 San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA, USA 3 Walden University, Minneapolis, MN, USA Correspondence should be addressed to Tooru Nemoto; [email protected] Received 7 November 2013; Accepted 14 January 2014; Published 4 March 2014 Academic Editors: B. Best and F. Uribe-Salas Copyright © 2014 Tooru Nemoto et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Based on focus groups for male customers who frequented Asian massage parlors in San Francisco, the present study described their sexual and drug use behaviors and attitudes toward practicing safe sex with Asian masseuses. A pervasive view among patrons was that they could engage in sex with masseuses without using a condom if they offered extra money. Their sexual behaviors with Asian masseuses were influenced by perceptions about vulnerability toward HIV/STIs, substance use behaviors, and masseuses’ initiation of condom use, which was often governed by unspoken rules at parlors. Customers perceived massage parlors as being a safe place compared with street sex venues. Some customers sought emotional attachment with Asian masseuses and expressed stereotypical views toward them as being docile and submissive. -
Decriminalized Prostitution: Impunity for Violence and Exploitation Melanie Shapiro, Esq Donna M
University of Rhode Island From the SelectedWorks of Donna M. Hughes 2017 Decriminalized Prostitution: Impunity for Violence and Exploitation Melanie Shapiro, Esq Donna M. Hughes, Dr. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons CC_BY-NC-ND International License. Available at: https://works.bepress.com/donna_hughes/94/ W11_HUGHES.DOCX (DO NOT DELETE) 5/23/17 8:44 AM DECRIMINALIZED PROSTITUTION: IMPUNITY FOR VIOLENCE AND EXPLOITATION Melanie Shapiro, Esq.* and Donna M. Hughes, Ph.D.** INTRODUCTION From 1980 to 2009, prostitution in Rhode Island was decriminalized.1 Prostitution was not prohibited or regulated by law if it was performed indoors.2 The lack of laws or regulations created a unique and permissive legal, economic, and cultural environment for the growth of sex businesses.3 Although a few counties in Nevada have legalized prostitution,4 no other state or county has decriminalized prostitution in recent decades.5 During the twenty- nine year period from 1980 to 2009, sexual exploitation and violence against women and girls were integrated into the economic development of Rhode Island’s urban areas.6 The growth of sex * Melanie Shapiro is an immigration attorney based in Dedham, Massachusetts. She is licensed to practice in Massachusetts, the First Circuit Court of Appeals, the District Court for the Federal District of Massachusetts, and the Board of Immigration Appeals. She is the co-founder of Citizens Against Trafficking. Shapiro received her Juris Doctorate from Roger Williams University School of Law, where she was a Public Interest Scholar. Email: [email protected]. ** Donna M. Hughes holds the Eleanor M. and Oscar M.