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Policing Vulnerability in Sex Work: The Harm Reduction Compass Model

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-11-27, 12:44 authored by Teela Sanders, Dan Vajzovic, Belinda Brooks-Gordon, Natasha Mulvihill
This paper explores the current approach to the interaction between policing and sex work in England and Wales. It reviews the legal and policy context and outlines current policing guidance and priorities, introducing the Harm Reduction Compass as a mechanism to advance policing policy and optimise operational decision-making. Through critical discussion of occupational culture and reforms in policing, it also assesses how continuity, reliability, and transferability can be achieved across police forces within the existing hostile and outdated statutory framework. The Harm Reduction Compass (HRC) aims to focus policing resources on adult sexual exploitation and crimes experienced by sex workers by decoding the complexities of different individuals’ personal circumstances. This paper proposes a new framework as a model to aid operational policing by triaging different scenarios to reach the most appropriate response. This new model, which identifies autonomy and harm as the most significant indicators, addresses harm and vulnerability holistically and combines policing with public health and community-based approaches; this ensures the pathway to assistance and intervention is an integrated multi-partnership. The HRC is a step forward in progressing police culture around the use of language and in dealing with crimes against sex workers in the most appropriate way.

History

Alternative title

Policing vulnerability in sex work and prostitution: the harm reduction compass model

Author affiliation

School of Criminology

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Policing and Society: an international journal of research and policy

Publisher

Taylor & Francis (Routledge)

issn

1043-9463

Acceptance date

2020-10-12

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2022-06-16

Language

en

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