The Oxford Handbook of the Economics of Prostitution
Manisha Shah editor Scott Cunningham editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:13th Oct '16
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Prostitution bears the unique title of being both the "world's oldest profession" and one of the least understood occupations. Unlike most of the crime and family literature, prostitution appears to be have all the features of traditional markets: prices, supply and demand considerations, variety in the organizational structure, and policy relevance. Despite this, economists have largely ignored prostitution in their research and writings. This has been changing, however, over the last twenty years as greater access to data has enabled economists to build better theories and gain a better understanding of the organization of sex market. The Oxford Hanbook of the Economics of Prostitution fills the gap in our understanding. It brings together many of the top researchers in the field who explain how the prostitution markets are organized across space and time, the role of technology in shaping labor supply and demand, the intersection of prostitution with trafficking, and the optimal use of law enforcement. What makes the material unique is its explicit focus on economics as the primary methodology for organizing our understanding of prostitution. The Handbook brings to scholars' attention for the first time a collection of original writings on prostitution that provides an overview of what is known and what is not known in this area. Researchers with an interest in underground markets, labor economics, risky behaviors, marriage, and gender will find the book's contents illuminating and path breaking.
This book, edited by Scott Cunningham and Manisha Shah, is part of the Oxford Handbook Series... It explores recent economic research about prostitution and sex... The chapters include descriptive, historical, and institutional chapters but mostly economic model type papers, such as the type that would show up in an applied economics journal. * D. C. Colander (Middlebury College), Choice Reviews Vol 55. *
ISBN: 9780199915248
Dimensions: 175mm x 249mm x 33mm
Weight: 1111g
540 pages