Introduction: Introducing Neo-abolitionism: Definition, Drivers and Debates
[Eilís Ward and Gillian Wylie]
Chapter 1: Neo-abolitionism and transnational advocacy networks: globalizing an idea
[Gillian Wylie]
Chapter 2: From Contested to Consensus: Swedish Politics on Prostitution and Trafficking
[Yvonne Swanström]
Chapter 3: The Netherlands: Analyzing shifts and continuities in the governing of sexual labour
[Silke Heumann, Sara Vida Coumans, Tamar Shiboleth & Marieke Ridder]
Chapter 4: Strange Confluences: Radical feminism and evangelical Christianity as drivers of US neo-abolitionism
[Crystal A. Jackson, Jennifer J. Reed and Barbara G. Brents]
Chapter 5: The Irish Parliament and Prostitution Law Reform: A Neo-Abolitionism Shoe-in?
[Eilís Ward]
Chapter 6: Almost Abolitionism: The Peculiarities of Prostitution Policy in England and Wales
[Anna Carline and Jane Scoular]
Chapter 7: Against the Trend: Resistance to Neo-abolitionism in Australian Anti-trafficking Policy Debates
[Erin O’Brien]
Chapter 8: In search of a fair and free society: the regulation of sex work in New Zealand
[Gillian Abel]
Conclusion: Carceral feminism, the state and the sex worker in a globalised era. Whose Power?
[Eilís Ward and Gillian Wylie]
Gillian Wylie is Assistant Professor of International Peace
Studies, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
Eilís Ward is Lecturer in the School of Political Science and
Sociology NUIG, Galway, Republic of Ireland.
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