Crime, punishment, and counselling – a study of the local judicial and social work application of prostitution policy in Sweden
Abstract
This thesis explores the social construction of a purchase of a sexual service within the implementation of prostitution policy in Sweden and seeks to contribute to the current knowledge about how a purchase of a sexual service is regulated based on how the law and social work are locally implemented.
The thesis consists of four papers based on two empirical studies, including legal documents concerning the enforcement of the Swedish Sex Purchase Act (Chapter 6 Section 11 of the Criminal Code), and interviews with professionals within social services providing counselling to individuals with the experience of purchasing sexual services. The first paper provides a descriptive analysis of how the Sex Purchase Act is implemented. The second paper examines how a purchase of sexual services is established as a criminal offence and the construction of the buyer and the seller during the legal process. The third paper examines the legal process of a case concerning the purchase of a sexual service and how stigma and social normative notions potentially influence the legal process. The fourth paper examines the construction of a purchase of a sexual service as a social problem and how this is addressed through the work of social services in Sweden.
The results show that a purchase of a sexual service is socially constructed as a criminal offence and as a social problem through the implementation of Sweden’s prostitution policy. This construction represents a purchase of a sexual service as a problem concerning gender equality, as a problem with a symbolic victim and as a problem of morality. All three representations construct the purchase of a sexual service as a problem that can be addressed through punishment and counselling with Sweden’s prostitution policy. Hence, experiences of buying and selling sexual services that fall within the current problem definition are addressed in the current criminal justice and social work practices. However, experiences outside the current problem definition are often left unproblematic. A potential consequence of this is that individuals with the experience of buying sexual services are positioned further way from the punishment and counselling used to implement Sweden’s prostitution policy.
Parts of work
I. Olsson, N. (2020). The Implementation of Sweden's prostitution law at the local level. Journal of Social Work. First published 12 March 2020. ::doi::10.1177/1468017320911352 II. Olsson. N. (forthcoming). An ideal witness - Implementing Swedish prostitution law with no plaintiff. Submitted and under review. III. Olsson, N. (2021). Brott och Skam - stigmas betydelse vid rättsfall om köp av sexuell tjänst. In A. de Cabo Y Moreda, C. Holmström & J. Kuosmanen (Eds.), Sex mot ersättning - säljare, köpare, makt och moral. (p. 93-120) Studentlitteratur: Lund IV. Olsson, N. (forthcoming). Men buying sex - a (new) field for social work in Sweden. Manuscript submitted.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Institution
Department of Social Work ; Institutionen för socialt arbete
Disputation
Fredagen den 12 mars 2021, kl 09:15, Europasalen, Wallenberg Conference Center, Medicinaregatan 20 A
Date of defence
2021-03-12
narola.olsson@socwork.gu.se
Date
2021-02-18Author
Olsson, Narola
Keywords
prostitution policy
the Swedish Sex Purchase Act
buying sex
implementation
law in action
social work
Sweden
stigma
policy analysis
WPR analysis
social construction
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-88267-17-7 (PRINT)
978-91-88267-18-4 (PDF)
Series/Report no.
Skriftserie för avhandlingar
2021:1
Language
eng