dc.rights.license | CC-BY-NC-ND | |
dc.contributor.advisor | Yerkes, Mara | |
dc.contributor.author | Hoogeveen, Noortje | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2025-08-18T23:02:07Z | |
dc.date.available | 2025-08-18T23:02:07Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2025 | |
dc.identifier.uri | https://studenttheses.uu.nl/handle/20.500.12932/49795 | |
dc.description.abstract | Sex work remains one of the most stigmatised professions globally, with stigma significantly
affecting sex workers’ health, safety, and access to services. Legal frameworks play a central
role in shaping and reinforcing this stigma, yet the relationship between law and sex work
stigma remains underexplored. This scoping review maps existing empirical literature on how
different legislative frameworks in the Global North contribute to the production, experience,
and resistance of sex work stigma. Drawing on 35 peer-reviewed studies, the review identifies
key gaps in conceptual clarity regarding both sex work and stigma and highlights the multi-
level ways in which stigma operates. Structurally through laws and moral discourses,
institutionally through healthcare, housing, and policing, and individually through social
interactions and internalisation. Findings show that stigma persists across all legal models due
to deeply entrenched cultural narratives and institutional practices. Decriminalisation offers
greater protection and opportunities for stigma resistance and is recommended in most studies
to create a first step towards more rights for sex workers. This review underscores the need for
legal, institutional, and cultural reforms that move beyond criminalisation and toward full social
recognition of sex work as legitimate labour. It calls for greater conceptual precision around sex
work and stigma in future research and sustained inclusion of sex workers’ voices in academic
and policy debates. | |
dc.description.sponsorship | Utrecht University | |
dc.language.iso | EN | |
dc.subject | Sex work remains one of the most stigmatised professions globally, with stigma significantly
affecting sex workers’ health, safety, and access to services. Legal frameworks play a central
role in shaping and reinforcing this stigma, yet the relationship between law and sex work
stigma remains underexplored. | |
dc.title | Mapping Sex Work Stigma: A Scoping Review on Sex Work Stigma Across Legal
Frameworks in the Global North | |
dc.type.content | Master Thesis | |
dc.rights.accessrights | Open Access | |
dc.subject.keywords | Sex work, Stigma, Policies, Legal frameworks | |
dc.subject.courseuu | Social Challenges, Policies and Interventions | |
dc.thesis.id | 51805 | |