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The Geography of Sexuality

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1 The Geography of Sexuality
Sexuality as an Element of Culture

2 Sexuality A set of practices and identities that a given culture considers related to each other and to those things it considers sexual acts and desires. What is the geography of sexuality? encompasses the relationship and interactions between human sexuality, space and place; this includes the spatial distribution of prostitution (1), sex trafficking (2) and the spatial constraints of homosexuality (3)

3 Prostitution “Sex work”, as it is commonly called, is spatially differentiated based upon the target clientele as well as systems of surveillance. Female sex workers who service an upper income clientele generally perform their work in the homes, hotels and other private areas of upper and middle class societies (brothels). Female sex workers serving a lower class clientele tend to operate within more public settings (“streetwalking”, “red-light districts”)

4 Kinds of Prostitution 1) Street Prostitution 2) Escort or Call-out 3) Sex Tourism and Sex Trafficking

5 Legalities/Examples of Global Prostitution
Europe (Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland) Prostitutes are unionized professionals Brothels are legal Prostitutes must be 18 yrs of age Sweden-prostitution legal, pimping is not Norway-prostitution is illegal, client commits crime Middle East (Turkey) Prostitution through gov’t-regulated brothels is legal

6 Legalities of Prostitution
United States Prostitution is illegal (except for Nevada, Rhode Island) Drugs, violence and pimps often associated with American prostitution Washington D.C.-Street Prostitution where mortality rate is 40X higher than national average. 75% of street prostitutes are victims of incest. Latin America (Costa Rica, Brazil) - Prostitution is legal, pimping is not Japan - Fellatio prostitution is legal Bangladesh - ”verotia” (prostitutes) earn approximately $4/hr, prostitution is legal Australia (Sydney, Melbourne) - Five Star Brothels-legalized prostitution in an attempt to regulate industry; clients are inspected for STDs and are then instructed to shower. Prostitutes can have sex with as many as 10 clients per shift and earn approximately $170,000/year.

7 Sex Trafficking Trafficking of humans exists in three ways…
Prostitution, forced labor, or for human organs. Some facts regarding sex trafficking and prostitution… 80 % of all trafficked persons are used and abused as sex slaves (demand and profit) 98% are women and girls (500,000 women each year around the world), 95% are abused during trafficking 2 million children have been subjected to prostitution in the global commercial sex trade 15,000 women trafficked into the U.S. each year (2010)-brothels, strip clubs, fake massage parlors $15.6 billion in revenue made in industrialized countries (46% of all sex trafficking revenues)-Why? 52% of traffickers are men Only 1 person convicted for every 800 people trafficked worldwide

8 Sex Trafficking Tiers

9 Sex Tourism vs. Sex Trafficking
It's easy to confuse all sex tourism with trafficking, and there are certainly some blurred lines. However, not all sex tourism involves human trafficking. For many women in SE Asia, sex work (or prostitution as it's often referred to) is a chosen profession made by an adult over the age of consent. In some particular countries, sex tourism is big business, accounting for a large chunk of the nation's economy. While there is much that could be said about the dynamics of sex tourism men coming from all over the world to pay for sex with young women, and an economy and culture that makes women feel like they have few other options . . .

10 Homosexuality Gays and lesbians are reshaping the geography of many states and sub-states. Two ways in which they are doing so… 1) gay and lesbian consumerism (Pink Spending) 2) understanding homosexuality

11 Pink Spending Open expression of sexual preference in consumption. Use of the word pink is in reference to the pink triangle that Hitler required homosexuals to wear in Nazi concentration camps. Consumer support by gays and other consumers of openly gay businesses has led to the establishment of identifiably “gay” spaces (shopping districts and neighborhoods). Gay Spaces have… Enabled gay communities in many core countries to gain significant political power (queer theory) Allowed gays to unify against the dominant ideology regarding sexuality (heteronormative)

12 Understanding Homosexuality
In contrast to heterosexuality, homosexuality is represented in social and cultural practices that go against the “heteronormative”. The central theoretical position of identifying sexual identities comes from the purpose of gender. Gender is now being looked at not as something we are , but something we do (how we portray our body to others)

13 Geography and Sexuality: A Map of Same Sex Couples

14 Cities in America with Same Sex Couples

15 Gay Rights around the World

16 Legalized Gay Marriage

17 Things to Consider… What characterizes gay/lesbian culture? Has it changed recently? Are gays and lesbians indistinguishable from “normal” folk? Is the Christian “Right” becoming more and more accepting of the gay/lesbian lifestyle? If so, explain why. Has the integration of gay culture into the mainstream society led to the disappearance of conventional masculinity? Is gay marriage a cultural issue?


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