FEMALE SEX WORK,NON-WORK SEX AND HIV IN PERTH |
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Authors: | C. E. Waddell |
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Abstract: | This study is based on repeated interviews with twelve heterosexual female commercial sex workers (SWs) in Perth. These informants deploy, with various degrees of success, strategies to demarcate ‘work-sex’, with its socially ascribed stigma, from ‘non-work sex’. Such strategies inhibit the spread of HIV at work but, ironically, increase the risk of HIV transmission during non-work sex. SWs recognise this risk and construct a variety of rationales to reduce their fear of contracting HIV and justify their strategies of demarcating work-sex from non-work sex. Efforts to reduce the risk of HIV infection among Perth SWs would seem to depend upon addressing not only these strategies of demarcation but these rationales in a supportive environment that recognises the creative complexities of their lives. |
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