Red X iconGreen tick iconYellow tick icon
Christchurch campusThursday 4 May 2017 11:58am

Gillian Abel image
Associate Professor Gillian Abel

Better understanding tensions between street-based sex workers and communities is part of a new study by a University of Otago, Christchurch, researcher into the impact of decriminalisation.

Associate Professor Gillian Abel is studying different aspects of street-based sex work since decriminalisation, including:

  • Tensions between street-based sex workers and the communities in which they work
  • Sex workers' experiences of violence and exploitation on the streets
  • The relationship between underage street workers and their minders, pimps or boyfriends, and whether young workers are being coerced to work against their will
  • Local council perceptions of the regulation of street-based sex workers in their locality
  • The relationship between sex workers and police

The two-year study will include street-based sex workers in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch and is funded by the Lotteries Commission.

Abel is a world-recognised researcher of vulnerable population such as sex workers, and her work has been influential in informing policy both in New Zealand and internationally. She is head of the Christchurch campus' Department of Population Health.

She says the research aims to contribute to a healthier and safer sex industry in New Zealand without increasing the vulnerability of street-based sex workers. It also aims to suggest mutually beneficial ways to ameliorate tensions between residents and sex workers in the areas where street-based sex work occurs.

Abel says tensions between Christchurch inner-city residents and sex workers have been well-publicised. There have been attempts by some councils in the past to address the perceived public nuisance effects of street-based sex workers to residents and shop owners while they wait for clients. These include calls to ban sex workers into less-populated areas but one impact of this could be to increase the vulnerability of street-based sex workers and the outreach workers who go to these areas to carry out their work.

“Research is needed to look at how street-based sex workers see their relationship with those in the community in which they work and equally how the community (residents and/or business owners) view their relationship with sex workers. Addressing this issue has the potential to explore other avenues to addressing tension between them.”

Abel says the issue of violence against sex workers needs to be better explored.

“There has been debate about whether violence has reduced since decriminalisation especially in the light of four well-publicised murders of street-based sex workers in Christchurch since the law change. Research is needed to explore what sorts of violent incidents are reported or not reported to Police and if reporting of violent incidents is related to trust in Police.”

Abel says research carried out before decriminalisation found 57 per cent of street-based workers surveyed said they started working before age 18. Just under 10 per cent of this group reported being forced to work, compared to 2 per cent of those over 18 years. Many young workers pay minders, boyfriends or pimps a portion of their money. The Lottery Commission-funded research will look at the relationship between sex workers and their minders, and whether coercion to work happens.

For more information, contact:

Kim Thomas
Communications Manager
University of Otago, Christchurch
Mob: 027 222 6016

A list of Otago experts available for media comment is available elsewhere on this website.

Electronic addresses (including email accounts, instant messaging services, or telephone accounts) published on this page are for the sole purpose of contact with the individuals concerned, in their capacity as officers, employees or students of the University of Otago, or their respective organisation. Publication of any such electronic address is not to be taken as consent to receive unsolicited commercial electronic messages by the address holder.
Back to top