TY - JOUR
T1 - Predictors of Public Attitudes Regarding the Impact of “End Demand” Legislation
T2 - Findings from an Israeli Survey
AU - Shamir, Hila
AU - Peled, Einat
AU - Shilo, Guy
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2024/3
Y1 - 2024/3
N2 - Background: The last two decades have seen a wave of legislative reforms in the regulation of the sex industry in many countries around the world. One particularly controversial reform is known as “End Demand” legislation: laws that criminalize clients of sex workers. Methods: This study explores what predicts public attitudes regarding the impact of end demand legislation, based on an online survey, conducted in January 2020, of 2012 Israeli adults, just after such a law passed in Israel in December 2018. We focus on attitudes regarding the impact of end demand legislation, as correlated with attitudes toward women who sell sex (WSS), men who pay for sex (MPS), and policies related to the sex industry and gender. Results: We found that a majority of the Israeli public had not formed an opinion regarding whether the law would achieve its declared goals as well as regarding its impact. Most of those who held an opinion about the law’s impact thought that it would not reduce the selling of sex and that it would negatively impact people involved in the sex industry. We also found greater support of criminalization of WSS among those who supported end demand legislation. Conclusion: The study presents these findings, explores their implications—and specifically the failure of supporters of the law to convince the public of its ability to positively impact WSS -and highlights the public’s troubling tendency to link support for the criminalization of MPS with that of the criminalization of WSS.
AB - Background: The last two decades have seen a wave of legislative reforms in the regulation of the sex industry in many countries around the world. One particularly controversial reform is known as “End Demand” legislation: laws that criminalize clients of sex workers. Methods: This study explores what predicts public attitudes regarding the impact of end demand legislation, based on an online survey, conducted in January 2020, of 2012 Israeli adults, just after such a law passed in Israel in December 2018. We focus on attitudes regarding the impact of end demand legislation, as correlated with attitudes toward women who sell sex (WSS), men who pay for sex (MPS), and policies related to the sex industry and gender. Results: We found that a majority of the Israeli public had not formed an opinion regarding whether the law would achieve its declared goals as well as regarding its impact. Most of those who held an opinion about the law’s impact thought that it would not reduce the selling of sex and that it would negatively impact people involved in the sex industry. We also found greater support of criminalization of WSS among those who supported end demand legislation. Conclusion: The study presents these findings, explores their implications—and specifically the failure of supporters of the law to convince the public of its ability to positively impact WSS -and highlights the public’s troubling tendency to link support for the criminalization of MPS with that of the criminalization of WSS.
KW - Criminalization
KW - End demand legislation
KW - Israel
KW - Prostitution
KW - Public attitudes
KW - Sex work
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85179948376&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s13178-023-00915-y
DO - 10.1007/s13178-023-00915-y
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AN - SCOPUS:85179948376
SN - 1868-9884
VL - 21
SP - 297
EP - 312
JO - Sexuality Research and Social Policy
JF - Sexuality Research and Social Policy
IS - 1
ER -