Escort agencies saw from the inside: an ex-prostitute tells her story

Bon a number of studies mention violence in sex work and describe the course of women offering sexual services as being strewn with abuse and victimization Other research reports on different situations, in which sex workers claim to have freely chosen to engage in this sector of economic activity after having assessed several job possibilities, to be able to ask and do respect their limits with regard to the services to be provided and, ultimately, find enough benefits boston escorts  in the type of work they have chosen to appreciate it and want to stay there for a more or less defined time Taken together, these studies show a wide variety of experiences in sex work, ranging from circumstances involving the exploitation of vulnerable women to situations where women describe their activities as work that is quite similar to everything.

Presentation of the study

Noting that knowledge was still to be developed regarding the sexual experience that women offering escort services make within the framework of their work, I undertook my doctoral project [3]

This research was supported financially by the with boston escorts the objective of understanding how the experience of sexuality in women offering escort services is organized and constructed. Starting from the perspective of interaction and using an anchored theory methodology, I preferred to build my understanding of the participants’ experience based on what they said about it rather than from a prior theoretical framework. Using my knowledge of sexology [4]

I used a definition of sexuality offered by; I prepared an interview guide providing for two meetings of approximately 90 minutes in order to get the participants to discuss their experience of sexuality both in the workplace and in their private life. Since the initial question invited them to talk about their beginnings in escort work, the participants elaborated extensively on their journey in sex work. In doing so, I was able to document the journey of these workers, including their working relationships with an employer and third parties, as well as the work environments they encountered there. I started sampling by contacting community organizations offering their services to sex workers; two of them are aimed mainly at socio-economically deprived people, many of whom are drug addicts, while the third is aimed as much at vulnerable and drug-addicted workers as at socio-economically better-off workers. The first participants then referred colleagues to me, thus allowing me to constitute a snowball sample. The participants’ anonymity and the confidentiality of their testimony were ensured by a change of names and places and by the non-disclosure of any information concerning them, which could allow them to be identified.