Abstract
There is a small but important body of literature on female sex workers' (FSWs) violence towards others, but little of that focused on low- and middle-income countries. Drawn from a larger biobehavioural study of FSWs in three cities in Papua New Guinea, we analyse the interviews from 19 FSWs who reported having perpetrated physical violence towards four major groups: (1) ex-husbands; (2) clients; (3) other sex workers and (4) other people (mainly women). Our study demonstrates that FSWs' use of violence arises from a complex set of social, material and gendered circumstances and cannot be addressed in isolation from other aspects of their lives.
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Kelly-Hanku, A., Worth, H., Redman-Maclaren, M., Nosi, S., Boli-Neo, R., Ase, S., … Hakim, A. J. (2021). Perpetration of Violence by Female Sex Workers in Papua New Guinea: “We will Crush their Bones.” British Journal of Criminology, 61(1), 104–122. https://doi.org/10.1093/bjc/azaa058
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