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Attitudes Toward Cisgender Women’s Participation in Sex Work: Opportunity for Agency or Harmful Exchange?

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Abstract

Despite the stigmatization of sex work in society, little empirical research has examined attitudes toward sex work, especially its modern incarnations (e.g., sugar relationships, webcamming). Here, a sample of 298 US residents (Mage = 40.06 years; 59.1% male, 40.9% female) was recruited through Amazon Mechanical Turk. Various theoretical predictors (e.g., right-wing authoritarianism [RWA]), sociosexuality) were set to predict the degree to which four sex work domains (prostitution, pornography, sugar relationships, webcamming) provide cisgender women agency (beneficial) or harm them (detrimental). We found that the domains of sex work were organized hierarchically, as theorized by the so-called “whorearchy,” whereby the more “unfavorable” domains (e.g., prostitution) fall at the bottom, and the more “favorable” ones (e.g., webcamming) sit at the top. Additionally, multiple regression analyses revealed that RWA (negatively) and sociosexuality (positively) were the strongest predictors of sex work agency across various domains. In predicting harm, RWA, feminism, religiosity, and age were unique positive predictors, whereas sociosexuality and male (vs. female) self-identified sex were unique negative predictors, across the four domains of sex work. Moreover, individual differences (e.g., RWA) were often significantly stronger predictors of agency or harm among female than male participants. The results suggest that although sex work domains vary in agency and harm ratings, individual differences (most notably, RWA and sociosexuality) are important predictors across domains, especially for cisgender women. Given the growing prevalence of such online forms of sex work, along with growing evidence of sugar relationships, it will become increasingly important to track reactions as these forms of sex work evolve.

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Notes

  1. These participants signed up to participate in the study but exited before completing any measures as they were not interested in continuing the study. The study was titled “Study of Attitudes Toward Sexual Situations,” so we anticipate that some potential respondents were hoping to see sexual images or scenes, which were not on offer in the present study.

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Funding

This project was funded by a Brock University Chair for Research Excellence award given to the second author.

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Correspondence to Hanna Puffer.

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The authors have no relevant financial or non-financial interests to disclose.

Research Involving Human Participants and/or Animals

This study was cleared by the Brock University Research Ethics Board.

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Informed consent was obtained from all individual participants included in the study.

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Puffer, H., Hodson, G. & Prusaczyk, E. Attitudes Toward Cisgender Women’s Participation in Sex Work: Opportunity for Agency or Harmful Exchange?. Arch Sex Behav 53, 1169–1185 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-023-02797-y

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-023-02797-y

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