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BJSW Advance Access originally published online on August 20, 2007
British Journal of Social Work 2008 38(7):1408-1424; doi:10.1093/bjsw/bcm049
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The British Association of Social Workers. All rights reserved.

Young Women, Local Authority Care and Selling Sex: Findings from Research

Maddy Coy

Maddy Coy is a Research Fellow at the Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit at London Metropolitan University. Previously, she has worked as a residential social worker with vulnerable young women and as an outreach worker with women and girls in the sex industry. The research on which this article is based is in the final stages of a doctoral study at Loughborough University.

Correspondence to Maddy Coy, Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit, London Metropolitan University, London, UK. E-mail: m.coy{at}londonmet.ac.uk


   Abstract

Researchers, practitioners and policy makers have noted the disproportionate number of young women with backgrounds of local authority care who are involved in commercial sex. However, the lack of knowledge about why this occurs means that there is little evidence with which to develop interventions. This article describes research that explored young women’s routes into the sex industry from local authority care using a feminist participatory action approach. The women’s life-story narratives demonstrate that the psycho-social legacies of their care experiences—how they defined themselves and placed themselves in the world—were instrumental in their entry into selling sex. From these themes, a framework for understanding young women’s involvement in commercial sex is drawn that traces young women’s paths from living in/leaving care to selling sex. The article includes discussion of the implications for social work practice with vulnerable young women and recommendations for interventions.

Keywords: young women, commercial sex, local authority care, identity, body, stigma


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