
Published online:
01 May 2010
Published in print:
11 March 2010
Online ISBN:
9780191722936
Print ISBN:
9780199578573
Contents
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REGULATE AND PUNISH: POLICING THE PROSTITUTE REGULATE AND PUNISH: POLICING THE PROSTITUTE
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The Morals Police The Morals Police
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The Rise of the Social Workers The Rise of the Social Workers
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Bureaucratic Infighting and Prostitution Bureaucratic Infighting and Prostitution
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RESCUING FALLEN WOMEN? THE SEX TRADE AND THE WELFARE STATE RESCUING FALLEN WOMEN? THE SEX TRADE AND THE WELFARE STATE
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Class, Gender, and Prostitution Management Class, Gender, and Prostitution Management
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Rescue Homes Rescue Homes
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Käthe Petersen: A Case Study of a Hamburg Social Worker Käthe Petersen: A Case Study of a Hamburg Social Worker
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THE PROSTITUTE AND THE STATE THE PROSTITUTE AND THE STATE
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Chapter
4 The Prostitute and the State
Get access
Pages
148–185
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Published:March 2010
Cite
Harris, Victoria, 'The Prostitute and the State', Selling Sex in the Reich: Prostitutes in German Society, 1914-1945 (Oxford , 2010; online edn, Oxford Academic, 1 May 2010), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199578573.003.0006, accessed 5 May 2025.
Abstract
This chapter focuses on the interaction between prostitutes and the state agencies charged with controlling them, in particular, the development of, and rivalry between, the two major institutions dedicated to prostitution management: the police and the social workers. It asks not only how each of these agencies interacted with prostitutes, but also how they dealt with each other. How did competition for resources between these two types of bureaucrats affect prostitutes? Did prostitutes prefer one agency to the other? If so, why? How did changing theories of deviance and worth affect bureaucrats' approaches to prostitution management?
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