...Solutions to the problem of prostitution in our society: An Annotated Bibliography Dittmann, Melissa. “Getting Prostitutes off the Streets.” American Psychological Association. American Psychological Association. 2014. Web. 30 Nov. 2014 This article is a great article. It talks about a real story of a prostitute that the American Psychological Association helps to get out of prostitution. The article talks about every steps took to help the prostitute. This article is about practical actions we can take to help people get out of prostitution. It show us that it’s not enough to denounce all the bad aspects of prostitution but we should rather take some actions to help people get out of this situation. This article is strong because it talks about real story. It can be useful to me to convince the reader that there are some real solutions to prostitution and that it is possible to erase it from our society. Gittleson, Wendy. “10 Reasons We Need To Legalize Prostitution.” Examiner.com. AXS Digital Group LLC, 2006. Web. 21 Apr. 2004. Gittleson gives us some good points about prostitution and the reasons why we should legalize it. For her, prostitution should be a legal job because the unemployment rate is growing. She also claims that it is the world’s oldest job so people will always continue to practice it. Gittleson’s last reason is the one that catches my attention the most; she claims that we should allow each prostitutes do whatever they want to do with their body...
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...Prostitution: An introduction to America’s biggest folly It is a commonly held belief that prostitution, whether or not it is its current illegal state which is dominated by criminals and abused women or whether it is its legal state which is much safer alternative, is a bad thing. However for little to no reason the idea of legal prostitution has been branded to be just as bad as illegal prostitution if not worse due to its acceptance of a “morally bankrupt” occupation. With legality prostitution becomes safer due to STD tests, less damaging due to eliminating factors like controlling pimps, addictive drugs, and aggressive customers, and, perhaps most importantly, more profitable due it being a taxable service. When compared to its seedier...
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...Prostitution is often called the world's oldest profession. It's been around since the beginning of time and can be traced back to ancient civilization. Prostitution hasn't stopped after thousands of years and it's not going to stop anytime soon. Prostitution is already legal in some parts of the world, but not in Canada and the United States. Pro-prostitution think prostitution should be legalized. They state that legalizing it would solve more problems than it would create and people could be protected from diseases, the streets could be kept cleaner, and prostitutes would have a safer working environment. Anti-prostitution demands that legal prostitution will increase the sex industry and human trafficking. Prostitution will hurt peoples. This is because prostitutes can cause a disease such as HIV. Pro-prostitution opposed that statement. Pro-prostitution demands that prostitution gives benefit to the customer because the customer gets their pleasure. It fulfils both people's needs. Even though prostitution is not legal, it will continue to happen. They will find a way around the law, and continue with their business. If it is legalized, laws can be made to keep prostitutes and people safer than they are now. Some people don't think much of prostitutes. Peoples think that the prostitutes who spread the disease. This is because most of the prostitutes are drug addicts which cause HIV. For the few bad ones, they would be the ones who would most benefit from legalization...
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...Does prostitution have economic justification? What will you think of someone who goes through physical and mental torture to earn a piece of bread? If for survival you need money and its cost was bad reputation status of second grade citizen, constant violence and persecution not just physically but mentally too, presenting your life to incurable diseases, destroying your present and hereafter what would you do, is it a fair deal? 2012 Submitted by: Bakhtawar jamil 12/31/2012 Does prostitution have economic justification? What will you think of someone who goes through physical and mental torture to earn a piece of bread? If for survival you need money and its cost was bad reputation status of second grade citizen, constant violence and persecution not just physically but mentally too, presenting your life to incurable diseases, destroying your present and hereafter what would you do, is it a fair deal? 2012 Submitted by: Bakhtawar jamil 12/31/2012 Table of Contents ACCOUNT2 WHAT IS PROSTITUTION?2 PROSTITUTUION THEN AND NOW3 REASONS OF PROSTITUTION WITH EYE OF DIFFERENT PEOPLE4 CONCLUSION6 BIBLIOGRAPHY7 Account: Prostitution from ages have been linked with money as its key definition states it to be exchange of sexual act for payment.in the present era the rise in many social issues such as number of patient with HIVAIDS, increased divorce rates, loosing of virginity, increase in number of suicide attempts and usage of drugs and all of these having their strings...
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...someone is forcibly sold for sex. According to the documentary A Path Appears, this is a pretty accurate definition. Its exact definition for sex trafficking is anytime someone is “made to commit prostitution due to force, fraud, or coercion.” The similarities between the two definitions surprised me, but something that surprised me even more was how uninformed everyone is to the sex trafficking that goes on in places considered close to home. We may have an adequate understanding of what sex trafficking is, but many have no idea just how much it affects the girls apart of the crime or how horrifyingly common it is. This was the main point that the creative team who created A Path Appears was trying to cover throughout the documentary....
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...Prostitution in the USA During my perusal of daytime television a few weeks ago, I came across a talk show featuring a woman who was selling her virginity. After majoring in Woman’s Studies in undergrad, Natalie Dylan (pseudonym) is using the money to pay for her graduate degree in Marriage and Family Therapy. She consulted with the owner of a legal brothel outside of Las Vegas, to auction off her first time. Natalie’s virginity auction sparked my interest in the legality of prostitution. Should women be able to sell their bodies? Why are some brothels legal in the United States, but prostitution as a whole illegal? What are the ramifications of selling your sexuality, and why does the government get involved? Body for Sale How does one put a price on any body part? Surely every time I hear of a new ailment that plagues another human being I can’t help but to think about how fantastic my arms or legs or elbows are, but should I be allowed to sell them to willing buyers? Let us consider all the other body components up for sale. Plasma donators can be “compensated” up to $200 a month for their time (Aho). Many people may believe that this is ok because it is used to save lives, but what about sperm and egg “donation”? A man can make up to $1000 a month for 1½ to two years; and though the numbers haven’t been nailed down, a woman can make an average of $4,217 per egg donation (Aho). Whether or not lives are saved in sperm/egg donation is arguable, but one thing is for sure:...
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...Against Legalizing Prostitution in Country like Indonesia There is an ongoing and intense debate surrounding decriminalizing prostitution. Some countries, such as The Netherlands, Canada and Australia have legalized Prostitution. They argue that the legalization of prostitution brings more good than harm, and so far people see that good things such as an increase in country’s gross domestic product and economic output from those country is happening. But, that’s just a glance of external view out of a lot of things that really happened inside of the country that legalize prostitution itself, such as morale issue and women trafficking. This writing will boldly show and explains the arguments against legalizing prostitution and why a country like Indonesia should not legalize prostitution. Some people, whom agree to legalize prostitution, come up with arguments that from their point of view will bring more goods than bad. First, they argue that legalizing prostitution will decrease the number of sexual harassment and rape. They believe that by the legalization of prostitution, it will reduce the number of unwanted sex since it is now woman’s choice to get in to the business of prostitution or not and it will not be called as rape if both parties are willing to have sex. Second, It will be better and safer for sex-workers if prostitution was legalized and regulated. This point argue that if prostitution was legalized then there will be less crimes against (un-legalized) prostitutes...
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...AIDS AND PROSTITUTION Fighting AIDS in developing countries is not a lost battle! For years, prostitution has been a major theme in discussions about the global AIDS problem. The media often run stories about AIDS that focus on sex workers (individuals who sell sex), and governments and HIV related organizations, frequently talk about prostitution in the context of AIDS. Of course these are related problems because one is the main cause of the other. This epidemic is bigger in developing countries, but it all exist in Europe or U.S.. The biggest difference between both sides of the Equator is the culture which influences the way to face this problem. It is assured that there are other issues which influence it, such as money, education and governments. However, all of them drift from culture countries. Developing countries are faced with a prostitution problem bigger than developed countries. Actually, in developing countries children are sold by their families to bordellos where they are forced to have sex without protection. This is leading to a high probably to be infected by AIDS. On a “TIME” article (Nepal´s lost daughters, “India soiled goods” by Dhruba Adhikary, Katmandu and Maseeh Rahman) we can read a lot of this examples told by people who lived this tragedies. All of them were infected by this disease and all of them were a lot of troubles when return to their families or birthplace because people reject them. They are called by “India´s soiled goods” and...
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...studied the life of a prostitute through their eyes and described the methods she used to study them and their communities. I found it very interesting that Claire Sterk chose to study prostitutes. That is a very dangerous subculture to observe. I believe Sterk was interested in working with prostitutes because she is constantly surrounded by it, living in Amsterdam, where prostitution and drugs are legal. Sterk also works in a school of public health and is primarily interested in women’s health, so it is of no surprise to me that she would want to take on this task. I also think that, that is why she felt so comfortable approaching the prostitutes and pimps because she did not feel she would be in that much danger because she never experienced illegal prostitution. There is less crime associated with prostitution and drugs in Amsterdam because it is accepted. Since it is illegal in America, there is a lot of violence that occurs when you are associated with prostitution because of the chance of being caught. It took a lot of patience for Sterk to work in this fieldwork setting of prostitution. She had to watch every word she said and every move she made. First off, it is not simple locating the prostitutes. She could not simply walk the streets of New York City and ask a woman if she was a prostitute. Sterk had to ask outside reliable sources, such as bartenders, cab drivers, health care providers, etc......
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...Adriana Ambari Writing 100-14 December 6th, 2012 Project 4 Human Trafficking: A Global Epidemic When Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation in 1963, we thought this was the end to slavery, but the sad truth is that it is still occurring today all over the world. This form of modern day slavery is called human trafficking. The United Nations defines human trafficking as "The recruitment, transportation, transfer, harboring or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of deception, of the abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability or of the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control over another person, for the purpose of exploitation."(United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime) Human trafficking is a global epidemic, which occurs everyday, in almost every single country in the world. It’s an international industry that is rapidly expanding. Patrick Belser of ILO has estimated human trafficking to be a $31.6 billion industry. This is second only to the drug trade. The 2010 Trafficking in Persons Report by the U.S. Department of State estimates that there are 12.3 million slaves being held captive around the world. This is second only to the drug trade. Globally 80% of human trafficking victims are women and 60% are children. In the minute it took you to read this paragraph two children have become victims to human trafficking. There...
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...average age of a teenage prostitute today is 13 years old, and this problem has hit communities from the impoverished to the upper middle class. The lure into prostitution has captured girls that are runaways from broken homes, as well as those who suffered emotional and sexual abuse. Although these girls are offenders, they are first victims; thus causing advocates, social workers, and policy makers to unite to establish prevention programs and provide help to those girls living as prostitutes under the hands of men who represent themselves as their pimp a way of escape. Teenage prostitution is a problem in our community that many have failed to look at the severity of its growing presence. The number of girls living a life of prostitution has greatly increased over the last few years and is now beginning to draw local and national attention. The numbers and tragic stories of these young girls lured into this lifestyle for various reasons are beginning to cause society to stop and take notice. Girls as young as eleven years of age are being forced into a lifestyle of prostitution as a means for survival. In order to begin to work on addressing the problem of teen prostitution, it is important to understand the dynamics of this cycle of lifestyle choice today and why it has become so widespread. The community has to come together to address the reasons these young girls are prostituting and determine what are the best ways to successfully...
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...Point and Counterpoint: Abortion and Alternatives - Article 13, for Sunday, July 2, 2006 THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY - A SEQUEL THE GOOD: · Louisiana Senate Committee backs a bill requiring that women planning an abortion be told of a baby's pain during abortion. · The AMA votes to promote Living Wills after the Schiavo exkperience. · Pro-Life organizations petition U.S. Bishops to become more assertive regarding pro-abortion "Catholic" politicians and their continued access to Holy Communion. · The Vatican this week applauded the actions of doctors who kept a brain-dead pregnant woman in Italy alive until the baby was delivered. · A Federal Appeals Court has supported the right of Pro-Life groups to join an abortion "conscience clause" case regarding medical personnel. · A new book published in Italy provides more evidence that RU 486 is unsafe for women. · In Missouri, Pro-Life advocates have filed suit over the State's denial of use of "Choose Life" auto license plates. This issue is also alive in Connecticut, currently in the hands of Attorney General. THE BAD: · Planned Parenthood has announced that it will use its political power for the benefit of Pro-Abortion candidates. This group performs the gretest number of abortions in the U.S., and has sold over one million "morning after pills". There is a message here for all of us who send charitable contributions either to PP or to organizations that support PP. · There are too many examples of State governmental...
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...1. Introduction: ECPAT (End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes) has described a clear idea about child prostitution. According to ECPAT (End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes), which became prominent in the late twentieth century for its work toward the elimination of child prostitution, child pornography, and trafficking of children for sexual purposes, defines child prostitution as "the use of a child in sexual activities for remuneration or any other consideration." According to UN Human Rights Commission (1989) “Child Prostitution” refers to the sexual exploitation of a child for remuneration in cash or in kind, usually but not always organized by an intermediary (parent, family member, procurer, teacher, etc.). Around the world today, there is a human right crisis of sexual abuse of millions of women, children and thousands of men in the prostitution & other form of sexual abuse. Child prostitution is the major part of total prostitution. Children are also involved in prostitution when they engage in sex in return for basic needs such as food, shelter or safety, or pocket money to purchase consumer goods. My paper explores the criminological factors associated with child prostitution in Bangladesh such as human trafficking and child prostitution, forced into prostitution, street children, broken home, social reintegration, livelihood and poverty, marital ...
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...Exploitation of Women in Prostitution Submitted by: 9 Nadine Bo 27 Isabella Manuel III-Katarungan Submitted to: Miss Josel Cruz March 11, 2013 I. Introduction Many of today’s social issues have been around for hundreds of years. Social issues can be likened to a cancer; a cancer that grows inside but can be fully removed with proper treatment. This includes corruption, poverty, war crimes, racism and human trafficking. Human trafficking has gone far from being unnoticed in its many forms such as prostitution of women and even children. As early as 18th century BC, prostitution has been recognized as a profession. It was a sign of hospitality for the ancient Sumerians, for others it was obligatory for their beliefs and religion. However, man has gone far from the ways of the old. Now, the world is at that point in history where everyone should have learned from ancestors’ accomplishments and failures alike. Prostitution, commonly referred to as “the world’s oldest profession”, must have been solved as a social issue long ago, but similar to other issues it hasn’t been fully eliminated because it is a social problem. Social problems are deeply rooted in the nature of humans and society. As long as there are people willing to understand and work with these women towards social equity, there is a solution. There are efforts to remove prostitution and most of all the exploitation, harassment and abuse of those involved such as legal measures and private organizations...
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...San Jose Pili National High School San Jose,Pili,Camarines Sur A Research paper in Fulfillment of the Requirements in English 10 Submitted to: JAEL P. OLAÑO Subject Teacher Submitted by: CHARISH JOY B. BAYOT 10-EINSTEIN March 2016 HISTORY OF VICES IN TEXAS The history of vice in the U.S. state of Texas has been an important part of the state's past and has greatly influenced its development. Vice activities, such as gambling and prostitution, have historically been a significant facet of both the state's culture and its economy. Law enforcement organizations have traditionally defined vice as including prostitution, gambling, alcohol and narcotics, and pornography. These activities, though always controversial, represented major influences in the state with some enterprises at times holding legendary status. The legal status of the individual activities has fluctuated substantially over time. Additionally during some periods individual communities and public officials have been accepting of many of these activities, even when they were illegal, because of corruption, because the activities were seen as inevitable, or often because the activities were economically important. Early Texas and the Republic of Texas Before the arrival of the European settlers in Texas, the plant peyote (peyotl in Nahuatl) had become a popular hallucinogenic among tribes in the Rio Grande Valley as well as parts of West Texas and Chihuahua. Tribes in the area included the Carrizo...
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