Talk:Prostitution
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-Should "whore" redirect here? I thought sex workers viewed that term as a perjorative.
Two points.
1. Regarding the section in history regarding Greek and Roman societies, does the author deliberately use the words "common prositute", because these (at least in the UK) have a very specific meaning.
2. Legality situation in the UK is quite simple: The paying for sexual favours, and accepting payment for them is legal.
It is however illegal to pimp due to regulations regarding living off immoral earnings. Sexual Offences Act 1956? Common prostitutes (that being, prostitutes working on the street which have been cautioned repeatedly by the police) have a number of other restrictions as to what they can or cannot do, and can commit a number of other offences (including loitering with intent). Street Offences Act 1959? Brothels are restricted by various legislation including not having planning permission, and I believe illegality of owning a bawdy house. It is also typically against tenancy agreements. Phonebox advertising is not legal, as far as I am aware, and the is against the BT contracts as well. Kerb Crawling is also an offence, under the Street Offences Act 1984 and was made an arrestable offence in 2001.
ASBO's are also being used by neighbours of prostitutes to stop them working.
So, to summarise, if you were to meet someone and simply pay them for sex, then it's entirely possible neither of you have broken the law (unless you're both of the same sex and then it's possible you might have broken the law) subject to consent etc..
However, if you organise or manage prostitutes then you are breaking the law.
The basis of this information in this discussion note comes from a dinner party I had with someone who works with the CPS and a "working girl". (And yes, I have interesting dinner parties).
--
Prostitution is not prohibited in Holland and most of Europe? Where are the facts to back this up. I believe prostitution is actually against the law in Holland, although the authorities turn a blind eye (i may be wrong about this)
I don't know of any other European countries where prostitution is legal. The only place i know of is the state of Nevada in the US.
Maybe i'm wrong - JamieTheFoool
- Prostitution is legal in at least Netherland France, UK, Italy, Germany, Swiss and Spain. (With various restrictions). Do you want more ?
Ericd 22:21, 20 Apr 2004 (UTC)~
My $0.02 says that it's illegal in Sweden. --Pinkunicorn
Uhhhh - and though prostitution is USED in many (shall we say 'all'?)societies, prostitutes are certainly scorned in scoieties touched by, say, Hinduism and Buddhism. --MichaelTinkler
---
- What do you mean hinduism and buddhism are negative about prostitutes? what is that all about?
- you guys dont mention lap dances
- you dont mention the prostitute's rights movements
- you keep saying 'universally shunned' and all that, well, i think some of these sex positive feminists might have a different opinion
- how come all the people writing articles are male? Can't you guys advertise in ms. magazine or something? - send us money and we will.
I edited your otherwise valid points to remove troll-like behaviour. These are decent issues, why not research and write about it yourself?
--- Regarding the situation in the Netherlands: Prostitution has always been legal, but holding a brothel was not. That is, the prostitute and the customer were legal, but the pimp was not. However, this was understandably not prosecuted. In October 2000 a new law went into effect where also this was made legal. So, nowadays prostitution is fully legal (provided no minors or illegal immigrants are prostituted, taxes are paid, municipal regulations are adhered to and such).
Regarding Sweden, I think I read somewhere that it was made illegal quite recently. -- Andre Engels
Correction and/or clarification: In Sweden, prostitution itself is not a crime, but purchase of prostitution sevices is. Strange but true. --Anders T?rlind
Oooh - and in a bizarre opposite to the situation in Holland, in the city of Atlanta, Georgia, in the 1980s and 90s in response to the competing pressures of neighborhood groups and the convention trade the City came to a modus vivendi - streetwalkers were prosecuted but houses of prostitution were not. Prostitution remained illegal but tolerated. Now this is mere anecdote - I'm sure you can't find it anywhere stated thus in the Atlanta Journal Constitution archives, but it was all over the alternative press. It wasn't the sex, it wasn't the exploitation, it was the sidewalk nuisance that irritated people. --MichaelTinkler
- Michael: the 'sidewalk nuisance' is what is frequently legislated against worldwide. Do a find on 'loitering with intent' on this talk page. Sorry to deflate your righteous indignation about perfidious southerners. Or something. -User:Herdrick
... Prostitution is legal in small counties in Nevada. It's heavily regulated though and can only legally take place in licensed brothels. --AxelBoldt
It is not legal in Las Vegas, itself, or the rest of surrounding Clark County. An interesting bit of trivia is that the IRS briefly owned and auctioned off the Mustang Ranch, the first legal brothel in Nevada. --[User:Belltower]]
The relevant law is NRSNRS 244.345 (Dancing halls, escort services, entertainment by referral services and gambling games or devices; limitation on licensing of houses of prostitution.):
- 8. In a county whose population is 400,000 or more, the license board shall not grant any license to a petitioner for the purpose of operating a house of ill fame or repute or any other business employing any person for the purpose of prostitution.
- Which I believe only rules out Clark (Las Vegas) and Carson (State Capital) Counties. ---Jagged
- There is no Carson County in Nevada. The city of Carson City is an independent city, and it only has a population of 50,000. Even Washoe County, where Reno is, only has 350,000, so the law only applies to Clark County, I guess. -- Zoe
Not sure about Europe, but there would be at least a few countries there where it is legal. Holland, Germany, and the England would be my first guesses.
- I visited a brothel in Germany with some friends, that certainly seemed legal. It even had a neon sign in front. There was a nightclub on the ground floor with nude dancers, and rooms upstairs where the clientele visited with the girls. -- Zoe
It is legal in parts of Australia, with regulations that vary from state to state. Definitely legal in New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory, for prostitutes working in brothels. For further information try http://138.25.65.50/databases.html then go to the relevant state or territory link and search for "prostitution". Then try to understand the maze of ammendments and horrible legal language:-) http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/legis/act/consol_act/pa1992205/index.html gives (some of) the ACT rules. The NSW situation is spread over lots of acts and ammendments and will be harder to pin down. Alternatively, just look in the phone books for Sydney or Canberra where there are plenty of brothels openly advertising.
- out of idle curiosity, what classificatory heading do they use in the Yellow Pages or Business Listings?
- Adult Services - the videos retailers have small colour ads, the brothel's entries are very benign, just the name. I guess it's up the the reader to make the inference (from the ACT Yellow pages).
Escorts and brothels are legal and common in Victoria as well, with restrictions (zoning restrictions, maximum size, can't advertise for sex workers, etc. etc.). Streetwalking is illegal, but there have been serious discussions about whether the restriction should be lifted in certain areas. -- Robert Merkel
Prostitutuin is definately not legal in England or any other part of the United Kingdom, or Ireland for that matter. I'm pretty sure it's illegal in Germany too, and france, and Spain. - JamieTheFoool
Prostitution itself is legal in the UK, but there are laws against various related activities. --Zundark
On a totally different note, I believe I heard somewhere that various primates also show behaviour that could be classified as prostitution. Anyone who have information about this would do well to add it to the page. --Anders T?rlind
Prostitution is legal in Germany. All big cities have areas where streetwalkers are allowed; these zones are set my municipal governments. Most cities have city-licensed brothels. Apartment prostitution is widespread and legal. Prostitution does not count as a regular profession and prostitutes are not elligible for typical German worker benefits such as health, unemployment, accident and disability insurance, social security, guaranteed vacation, right to strike etc. They cannot join private health insurance plans unless they lie about their job. The current government is about to change that and accept prostitution as a profession.
A quirk of civil law makes it possible that a customer of a prostitute may refuse to pay after the fact without culpability (since the contract was "against the good morals"). If the prostitute refuses services after having been paid, she is prosecuted for fraud. This is also being changed.
Maintaining a luxurious brothel is a grey area: the owner can be prosecuted for "furtherance of prostitution" which is, along with pimping, illegal. Mostly, the luxurious brothels are tolerated though, unless they employ illegal immigrants or are owned by organized crime.
There are also lots of fly-by-night brothels where foreign prostitutes (from Eastern Europe, Thailand, Africa, South America) are held against their will, which is of course illegal.
Prostitution is legal in Spain too, but I don't have details.
- please understand that I am not trying to be snide about German bureaucracy, but if it's not a 'regular' profession with health care access, is it legal or is it a tolerated sideline for some people who need grey income? In America this would be like that lovely line on a 1040 tax form where one may report illegal earnings. The difference between Code law and Common law (not that I'm an historian of law with good examples at my fingertips) leads me to wonder if toleration is a more important classification in Code law states. The existence of zones in cities - again, are these zones of non-prosecution or are they zoning code in the American sense? I ask, Axel, because you - ahem - seem to know.
- It is legal in the sense that there is no law against prostitution. When I hear "tolerated", I usually think of something that is technically illegal but generally not prosecuted, such as driving 60mph on an US highway; this is not the case for prostitution in Germany. Prostitutes have to pay taxes but often don't since they work for cash. Until recently, prostitutes were required to get (free) regular health checks, but that has been stopped beginning this year I believe, except in Bavaria. Prostitutes have to be registered with health authorities, but many aren't. Prostitutes who work the streets outside zones or who work in a brothel without a license are subject to fines, but mostly it is ignored. When police raid brothels, they only look for illegal immigrants. --AxelBoldt
- That's my understanding as well. Throughout most of the world, there are few actual statutes prohibiting prostitution itself except in the US and Muslim countries, though many prohibit associated activities. In most of the the US, there are speecific statutes against prostitution, except in a few rural areas in Nevada, Wyoming, and elsewhere. There are also places like San Francisco where it is in fact illegal, but generally tolerated, in the sense that police rarely exercise their prerogative to prosecute prostitutes unless they do something else to bother someone. There are also many places where one can purchase services that might be considered prostitution in some jurisdictions but not others. To answer an earlier question in this discussion, look in the phone book under "Escorts", or "Outcall Massage". -- LDC
- I could not verify the Wyoming claim. See [1] (http://legisweb.state.wy.us/statutes/sub6.htm) --AxelBoldt
- Guess I'm out of date or misremembered that one. There is some other western state that had legal brothels relatively recently. --LDC
The comment that male prostitution for female clients is negligible sounded like an exaggeration. While they are undoubtedly rare compared to female prostitutes, they do exist.
- Then there's arrangement like the one that George Peppard's character had in My Fair Lady. I wonder how common those are? But that might fall outside prostitution proper (ditto Anna Nicole Smith).
Where do people who work in porn films fit in this article?
- They don't. A Californian prosecutor once tried to prosecute porn actors as prostitutes and was laughed out of court. Porn actors don't offer sexual services for money, they act out sexual situations for money. --AxelBoldt
- Well, then, do you think it's worth explaining that distinction in the main article? --Robert Merkel
- Could surely be done if it is considered to be necessary. Frankly, personally I never saw the connection between porn actors and prostitutes; isn't it clear that they are different occupations? --AxelBoldt
I wrote: "In many rich countries, illegal immigrants work in prostitution, quite commonly against their will." I'm not sure if "quite commonly" is the right choice of words. I know only the situation in Germany, and you'll find news reports maybe once a month about prostitutes being freed by police, so it definitely exists. It also is doubtlessly true that many foreign prostitutes work in Germany on their own choosing: it is the quickest way to make lots of money without an education. Now I don't know whether forced or unforced prostitution among immigrants is more common, and I don't think there are any statistics. So is "quite commonly" a good choice of words or is it not neutral enough? --AxelBoldt
"Law enforcement is typically concentrated against establishments engaged in sexual slavery, against establishments owned by organized crime and against forms of prostitution that generate citizen complaints." ... For this to be balanced, it should be added that the police have traditionally participated by accepting favors from prostitutes and in extorting money from prostitutes.
I deleted "eliminating sexual slavery" from the list of reasons given for heavy regulation of prostitution. I have never heard that as a justification, nor can I see how it would work. Nevada for instance explicitly mentions STD control (and mandates condoms), but sexual slavery is not mentioned. Countries usually focus on public health issues, making sure that the workers get health checks and are registered with the government etc., and they also want to control where prostitution takes place. Sexual slavery is as prevalent in regulating countries as it is in prohibitory countries. Illegal immigrants in Germany for instance cannot be registered as prostitutes and are therefore easy to exploit by organized crime. Complete decriminalization like in the Netherlands seems to be the better strategy if one wanted to give exploited women a way out. --AxelBoldt
- Axel, the theory goes something along the lines of that customers of prostitutes will prefer to use legal rather than illegal brothels, because of the reduction in risk of catching STDs and of legal sanction. In legal brothels, authorities can monitor the situation to ensure that all workers are legally entitled to work in the jurisdiction concerned, are not coerced into working there, aren't addicted to drugs etc. etc. Of course, the continued existence of illegal brothels puts the lie to that argument, as you say, but it is advanced in Australia.
One, George Peppard was not in My Fair Lady -- it was Breakfast at Tiffany's a howling mistake!
Two, This article reads like a prurient high-schooler's views of prostitution -- based largely on TV movies.
This needs to have some serious analysis of social implications, political positions, and generally some meat injected.
- Nobody ever claimed the article was perfect in its present state. If you have knowledge in the area, please share it with us. --Robert Merkel
I don't know the details of the new German law, but I wonder if the German and Dutch situations are now sufficiently similar that we can mention them together in the preceding paragraph. Can prostitutes in Germany now buy health insurance, and can they join the social security system? --AxelBoldt
'The term "prostitution" is sometimes used in the more general meaning of having sex in order to achieve a certain goal different from the pleasure of having sex.'
i'm new and my shift key is broken, so i don't want to edit the actual article just yet, until i repair my shift key and get the feel of wikipedia.
anyway i think the quoted statement, in the beginning of the article, isn't totally accurate. lets say a couple wants to have a child, usually it takes some tries. after about ten tries some couples will continue not for the pleasure of the sex, but for the child. or if i'm feeling particularly horny and my wife isn't, or vice versa, she might give in to satisfy my needs, and with a happy hart of course, nobody wants sex with an irritated person , i think.
i think it should read something like
'The term "prostitution" is sometimes used in the more general meaning of having sex in order to achieve a certain goal different from the pleasure of having sex and with a motive other than an emotional feeling towards a person.'
thats my two cents, put in yours, salt28.
- Yup, I think your defintion is better. Please change it. AxelBoldt, Saturday, June 22, 2002
Axel, you wrote:
- In many rich countries, illegal immigrants work in prostitution, often against their will.
First off, I wasn't aware that there were "many" rich countries. Secondly, could you provide a source for illegal immigrants working as prostitutes against their will? Not that I'm doubting you, of course, but I'd like to be able to call the user's attention to sexual slavery, both in peacetime and in war conditions. --Ed Poor
See for instance the last paragraph in http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/1948407.stm. Similar articles appear daily in the European press, so you should easily be able to find more examples.
In The New York Times, June 9, 1993 "In Europe's brothel's, women from the East. (Eastern European women emigrate to Western Europe to become prostitutes, many times against their will)" Marlise Simons. AxelBoldt
- Axel, since you seem to know more about this than I do, would you please add to debt bondage some information on women forced to be sex workers? --Ed Poor
I changed "generally stigmatized in western societies" back to "almost universally stigmatized", as non-western societies are typically much harsher towards prostitutes than western ones. AxelBoldt 00:23 Sep 26, 2002 (UTC)
- I suppose we should specify which cultures we are speaking of. Japan was the example I had in mind as a non-western culture where prostitutes aren't really stigmatized.
- I think even there women typically don't tell their parents or their dates that they work as prostitutes. Geishas of course are highly regarded, but not really prostitutes. AxelBoldt 01:22 Sep 26, 2002 (UTC)
We keep hearing about middle-class Japanese teenage girls who use cell phones to arrange prostitution work. Recently, with the rise of phones that can transmit images, they can even screen potential clients by, say, whether they look "kind".
I think we should mention the Japanese schoolgirl thing in the article. Also, we should address the ethical and/or moral issues. Like, do people apply different standards to the behavior of minors? How about the age of consent issue? What differentiates teen prostitution from child abuse (legally, at least)? And my favorite: what sort of man hires a 15-year-old girl to have sex with him? --Ed Poor
"Prostitution occurs in massage parlors and, in Asian countries, in barber shops, where sexual services may be offered for an additional tip."
I would like to see the evidence to backup this claim, it seems like anti-asian propaganda to me.
- Try google for "barber shop prostitution asia" AxelBoldt 20:02 26 May 2003 (UTC)
- Very late reaction but still: I would like to change some massage parlours in many masage parlours. I have been living in Thailand for 5 years, and travelled in the region from China to Indonesia and in every country even when you get a footmassage "extra" services are offered. Waerth 19:40, 2 Apr 2004 (UTC)
I restored the Carribean as a sex tourist destination (which contains Cuba); in Europe, the Dominican republic especially is openly advertised for sex tourism. AxelBoldt 20:02 26 May 2003 (UTC)
the pictures shows a particular viewpoint on 'prostitution' as being ilicit or seedy, which is not necesarily true! it doesn't really ilustrate prostitution much, so i think we should get rid of it. no? qqq
Keep it.Vancouverguy 01:41, 4 Sep 2003 (UTC)
This is street prostitution we can add a legend. I hesitated a lot before uploading this photo. It's blurred enough not to hurt anyone. Of course this can't be very explicit. Ericd 01:46, 4 Sep 2003 (UTC)
put the pic. down with the 'street prostitution' bit ?qqq
- Done. - Patrick 11:14, 4 Sep 2003 (UTC)
Dictionary definitions
pimp (http://dictionary.reference.com/search?r=67&q=pimp), madam (http://dictionary.reference.com/search?r=67&q=madam)
Pimp includes both males and females, madam is female-only and brothel-specific. Martin 23:47, 12 Sep 2003 (UTC)
- Well, ok, so m-w.com and some others think that pimp is male-only. But I'll maintain that the terms are not parallel - m-w.com agrees with me and dictionary.com that madam is brothel-specific. Martin 23:53, 12 Sep 2003 (UTC)
- Also, the modern hiphop usage of "pimp" seems very different, more denoting something like a person showing off his style and money.
Question
"Some municipalities in the Netherlands would like a "zero policy" for brothels, i.e. not allow any, on moral grounds, but by law this is not possible. However, regulations, including restrictions in number and location are common. Whether a zero policy on planological grounds is allowed is still unclear."
What does that last sentence mean? "Planological" doesn't appear in dictionary.com, and I have no idea what it is. Meelar 07:26, 31 Mar 2004 (UTC)
- Sorry for the late answer. I meant spatial planning and have fixed it now.--Patrick 00:03, 21 Apr 2004 (UTC)
"various Communist countries being notable exceptions." As there's not so many communist in the world today I would wrote "were" can someone rework this phrase, please ? Ericd 22:15, 20 Apr 2004 (UTC)
I was thinking it might be informative if someone could give an idea of the different classes of prostitutes and how much they charge; I'm afraid I don't know much about this.
Deco 17:15, 25 Apr 2004 (UTC)
Geisha is not prostitute
Geisha is not prostitute. "The body is not sold even if it sells an art" (芸は売っても身は売らない). Some geishas sell herself and they are looked down as "Daruma Geisha". So, they denied ask for Recreation and Amusement Association. --Kadzuwo 14:01, 3 May 2004 (UTC)
Etymology
The article says this:
- The English word whore, referring to (female) prostitutes, is drawn from the latin word hora meaning hour, hence a whore is an hour-woman, somone you own for an hour, but usage of that word is widely considered pejorative and prostitute is a less value-laden term. See also: call girl, courtesan.
This goes contrary to every etymological dictionary I've looked at, all of which conclude that the English word whore is a Germanic word, hâra in Old English, cognate with Gothic hors, and also with Latin cara, "dear one." The Latin word hora was in fact borrowed into Old English and is the root of Modern English "hour", where its pronunciation /'aU ,@r/ represents what you would expect from ordinary phonological laws from that input. I believe this etymology is incorrect. Smerdis of Tlön 15:00, 3 May 2004 (UTC)
- I have corrected the page. -- The Anome 15:18, 3 May 2004 (UTC)
- Afaik, "whore" has common cognates in all major germanic languages. At least the german, dutch and swedish cognates are still very common.
NPOV problem?
The verb to prostitute may be used thus: A writer prostituted his talents to write pamphlets supporting a political cause in which he did not believe. Given that use of the verb, perhaps using the word prostitute to refer to a person selling sex is not NPOV. Besides, shouldn't that more basic meaning of the word be the topic of an article? Michael Hardy 20:39, 3 May 2004 (UTC) padpad
Problem is, the basic meaning is the sexual one. The more general meaning is a later one reached by generalisation.
Wikipedia is not a dictionnary and this article is about "prostitution" not "prostitute".
Extent of Prostitution's Legalization in the World; Need Clarification
In one sentence in the article, it states:
- The basic act of exchanging money for sex among adults is legal in most countries.
Shortly thereafter, it states:
- In most countries, it is almost impossible to engage in most forms of prostitution legally because surrounding activities such as advertising, solicitation, pimping, and owning, operating, or working in a brothel are illegal.
These two sentences seem to say the opposite; is prostitution in the world mostly legal or mostly illegal — or something in-between? To whoever can clarify this, thanks. —Catdude
- It says that often the basic act is legal, but surrounding activities are illegal, that is not a contradiction. It is impracticable if a prostitute and a client can not find and recognize each other.--Patrick 10:28, 5 May 2004 (UTC)
- Brothels are widespread, but not legal ones.--Patrick 20:21, 6 May 2004 (UTC)
Oldest profession
What proof supports the phrase that prostitution is the world oldest profession? [[User:Nichalp|¶ nichalp | Talk]] 19:04, Jul 26, 2004 (UTC)
- It's simply an old saying, not an actual statement of fact. I've clarified. [[User:Meelar|Meelar (talk)]] 19:10, 2004 Jul 26 (UTC)
- It's likely a very old profession, anyway... Probably much older than the written sources referring to it...
- Bah. Does every elegant metaphor have to be crudely spelled out? The first prostitute was Cavewoman Jane who said to Caveman John, "I'll sleep with you if I can have some of that mastodon meat." Or, in the vernacular of the day, "ug ug, ug ug ug ug, ug ug, ug." The first "trade" was overwhelmingly likely to have been the first woman of our species, trading her sexual favors for protection and amicable relations with the first man of our species. Why anyone should think money was involved is beyond me; silly thought! Since when does money have to change hands for something to be a profession? -Kasreyn
- But in that case should we characterise the relationship between Caveman John and Cavewoman Jane as prostitution or marriage? Part of the problem here is exactly how you define prostitution.
PatGallacher 16:41, 2005 Mar 6 (UTC)
- I believe prostitution came first, and the first marriages were simply formalized prostitution. Look at the "bride price" and "dowry" and other such holdovers; fathers essentially sold their daughter's vaginas to the highest bidder. Fathers were the first pimps in history. As for definitions, I define prostitution as trading sexual favors for anything else of value, including shelter, food, protection, even companionship or love. The only true loving relationship is one where love is traded for love; if sex is traded for love or good relations, I consider the relationship to be emotional prostitution. Since few marriages, in my observation, exemplify "love for love" trades, and are usually an example of two people bartering various behaviors and goods, I consider most marriages to be de facto prostitution, so I have no problem with calling my scenario of the "first marriage", prostitution. -Kasreyn
Drugs, disease and prostiution
Controversial text removed from article:
- A significant number of prostitutes in some areas have resorted to prostitution to feed their drug addiction: they will generally not only have poor health from their drug dependency, but will be more desperate, and more willing to perform sex acts without safer sex precautions. If they use injected drugs, they may also carry blood-borne diseases transmitted by the sharing of needles.
- Here's a (non-govermental, non-NIMBY) cite in support of some of this: http://www.drugtext.org/library/articles/peddr0031.htm
- For a view on the other side, see http://www.bayswan.org/notes.html
-- The Anome 23:30, 12 Sep 2004 (UTC)
The word "hooker"
where did the word hooker come from? the word doesn't even appear in the article. - 70.18.38.122 22:40, 27 Sep 2004 (UTC)
- The just-so story is that this comes from the camp followers of General Joseph Hooker. However, according to that article: "There is no basis for the popular legend that the slang term for prostitutes came from his last name due to a certain lack of military discipline at his headquarters. The term 'hooker' was used in print as early as 1845, many years before Hooker was a public figure." -- The Anome 11:16, 30 Sep 2004 (UTC)
- I believe it is well established that it comes from Croeland's Hook, or something like that, a red light district in Manhattan.
PatGallacher 16:41, 2005 Mar 6 (UTC)
- See also http://tafkac.org/language/etymology/hooker/hooker_tindall.html and http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=hooker The New Oxford Dictionary of English does not give an etymology: has anyone got an OED? -- The Anome 11:23, 30 Sep 2004 (UTC)
Animal kingdom
In the section 'In the animal kingdom' : The author finds no possible motivation for unattached male penguins to have sex with females aside from pleasure. Perhaps we haven't heard of Charles Darwin's work yet? With a bit of Googleing I see that this silliness was lifted from this fluff piece: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/60302.stm
- I read somewhere that the female penguins sometimes ran off with the stones, without giving the male penguins "services" beforehand..
This kind of information belongs under animal behaviour, not under prostitution, especially with the moral/legal aspects surrounding it. The interesting part is that this behaviour was observed, not that it happens. The way the section is written seems to imply surprise that this happens in animals, like it's bad or inherently wrong. Regardless, most of the information in that section is incorrect or extremely misleading anyway. Whoever wrote that section should read the actual paper.
The researchers proposed several explanations for the behaviour which aren't mentionned here. To say this is prostitution with the amount of information left out is like saying that anyone who leaves a marriage with more money than they had originally is a prostitute.
In any event, the penguin situation doesn't fit the definition of prostitution set out in the article, specifically, the "sale of sexual services...with many persons".
- Penguins aren't persons.
- Is the male penguin entering into a sales contract with the knowledge that he will be required to exchange a material item?
- Was the same female consistently doing this?
- Was it clear in the male penguin's mind that no partnership will be formed after the fact?
Additionally, "In a more general sense of the word, anyone selling their services for a cause thought to be unworthy can be described as prostituting themselves."
- Do penguins consider reproduction unworthy?
The penguins engage in sex and the female takes a stone (something of no value to the male) and then leaves. In the human world, this would be like having a date (who spent the night) leave after you've cooked them breakfast or with your sweater. That hardly makes them a prostitute.
See paper here: [2] (http://elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Auk/v115n02/p0526-p0528.pdf) --jag123 06:23, 12 Dec 2004 (UTC)
About the Thai stuff
Do we really need to know, in the context of this article, what exactly goes on in some bars in Thailand? Looks to me like it gets disproportional attention here. Someone enjoyed his vacation travels, I guess...
- Yes, I think this needs fixing too. It sounds a little like original research to me. I suggest some sources are cited if we're going to keep any of this. But it needs trimming down; maybe it can be summarised and moved to a sub-article? — Matt 00:55, 29 Nov 2004 (UTC)
- The section about Street Prostitution also feels as if it is either original research or an unfortunately POV warning about the dangers of selling one's body on the street. With all of the books & in-depth sociological research available, I would think someone could quickly rewrite this with numerous citations to both investigative news articles & peer-reviewed sources, & convey much of the same material. -- llywrch 05:14, 23 Dec 2004 (UTC)
The current version kind of seemed like an impassioned defense. Much of it was POV, and what was included was a function of perspective. Comments like some lawyers are drug users are irrelevant, and clearly have an agenda. More editing of this section is needed. In fact, I recommend it be merged in. Superm401 00:06, 29 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Psychological impact on prostitutes
I believe that this article should not ignore research and/or debates on prostitution's psychological effects on prostitutes. For some prostitutes, work is degrading and soul-numbing, yet for others, (a minority) it is probably a delightful way to express their sexuality and to get paid at the same time. These are important issues -- we need to look at how the prostitutes themselves are affected by this trade.Zantastik 23:43, 2 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- "Degrading" and "soul-numbing", huh? You just described my wage-slave job in a factory to a T. Does that make me a whore? ;) Fortunately, there aren't a bunch of misty-eyed weirdos waving ancient books around and criminalizing me and my profession. Lucky me! -Kasreyn
Removed POV Paragraph
I removed the following paragraph because I felt it to be way too POV:
- Non-commercial prostitution in mainstream circles of society
- This is one of the many dark corners of almost every capitalistic society. Sexual favors are exchanged in respectable circles of the society, in a very sectretive way, for various kinds of non-monetary advantages. The most notable are the film industries, where beginning actresses offer free sexual services to film directors to get acting contracts, and enter into the business. Likewise, military officials offer their wives to their seniors, who are in control of granting or delaying promotion, in order to climb up the militiary ladder quickly.
— Ливай | ☺ 01:54, 28 Feb 2005 (UTC)
How common is prostitution?
Given the Colorado Springs data, we should probably be able to estimate the number of "have-ever-been" female prostitutes in the age range 18-59, so we can provide a more realistic comparison with the male figute of 16% "have-ever-been" 18-59 year old prostitutes' clients. Guessing wildly, something like: 0.023% of women are prostitutes at any time, assume steady-state and (from data) 5 year career and 59-18 = 41 years, so a woman who is a prostitute for 5 years in that period is effectively "5/41 of a full-time prostitute" over the entire period. Therefore, the female "has ever been" prostitution figure jumps to 41/5 * 0.023% = 0.19%. Comparing this with the male "has-ever-been" figure of 16% gives a more believable [?] 84:1 ratio between "have-ever-been" classes of clients and prostitutes. Or are my back-of-an-envelope estimates nonsense? -- Karada 15:32, 29 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Definition
The article could use a section on definitions of "prostitution," legal or otherwise. For example, the State of Pennsylvania does not consider peep shows where men are allowed to gratify themselves to be "prostitution." There has to be some bodily contact between the client and the putative prostitute. This definition could be contrasted with others.
Historical discussion and images?
Turkish_-_Dancing_Kocek_-_Late_19th_c_-_wiki.jpg
Urban legend
- Italy does not allow prostitutes to work who are called Mary. This is because Mary is the name of Jesus's mother and Italy is home to the Vatican which is sacred to all Christians.
This feels like an urban legend to me. Can someone back it up? --Carnildo 05:24, 23 Jun 2005 (UTC)