Abstract
The Netherlands legalized prostitution in 1999 and is currently debating a new bill, the ‘Law regulating prostitution and
suppressing abuse in the sex industry’. The legalization made a distinction between voluntary sex work, which is legal, and
forced prostitution, which remains a criminal offence. In the 2000s, evaluations showed that, while there is a reasonably
working legal prostitution sector, abuse, bad working conditions and trafficking still occur. The media have played an important
role in reframing the issue, and politicians have successfully set the revision of the legalization on the agenda, resulting
in a new bill at the end of the decade. With this proposal and its framing of fighting human trafficking and organized crime,
the Netherlands is reneging on its original progressive legalization by adopting a strict regulation of all prostitution.
Sex workers will have to register with the authorities; the age to work in the sex industry will be raised to 21 years and
clients have to check whether the sex worker is registered and not an undocumented worker. This article accounts for these
two major shifts in prostitution policy in the Netherlands and discusses the consequences for sex workers.
suppressing abuse in the sex industry’. The legalization made a distinction between voluntary sex work, which is legal, and
forced prostitution, which remains a criminal offence. In the 2000s, evaluations showed that, while there is a reasonably
working legal prostitution sector, abuse, bad working conditions and trafficking still occur. The media have played an important
role in reframing the issue, and politicians have successfully set the revision of the legalization on the agenda, resulting
in a new bill at the end of the decade. With this proposal and its framing of fighting human trafficking and organized crime,
the Netherlands is reneging on its original progressive legalization by adopting a strict regulation of all prostitution.
Sex workers will have to register with the authorities; the age to work in the sex industry will be raised to 21 years and
clients have to check whether the sex worker is registered and not an undocumented worker. This article accounts for these
two major shifts in prostitution policy in the Netherlands and discusses the consequences for sex workers.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-11
- DOI 10.1007/s13178-012-0088-z
- Authors
- Joyce Outshoorn, Institute of Political Science, University of Leiden, P.O Box 9555, 2300 RB Leiden, The Netherlands
- Journal Sexuality Research and Social Policy
- Online ISSN 1553-6610
- Print ISSN 1868-9884