WEIGHT: 51 kg
Bust: E
One HOUR:150$
Overnight: +40$
Sex services: Smoking (Fetish), Role Play & Fantasy, For family couples, Slave, Spanking
To browse Academia. The article explores how Czechoslovakia reacted to the persistence of prostitution during State Socialism β89 when its underlying MarxistβLeninist ideology predicted that it should disappear with the overthrow of capitalism. The paper adopts a law in context approach, critically analysing legal instruments as well as expert commentaries by social scientists, legal scholars, judges and prosecutors from the period.
Women in prostitution were condemned for their sexually promiscuous behaviour while all women were blamed for failing in their gender roles as good women, wives and mothers.
Whereas the official policy was thus enforcing socialist morality, the experts reverted to traditional bourgeois morality, in clear betrayal of the promises of both MarxismβLeninism and the State Socialist ideology as regards the equality of the sexes. The heightened responsibility all women were given to prevent prostitution was unique. State Socialist Czechoslovakia is thus more than yet another case study of a repressive regime that controls and punishes the more vulnerable side of the prostitution transaction and apportions blame in a gendered way.
Instead, it demonstrates how prostitution can become a vehicle for promoting and upholding traditional gender norms not only towards women in prostitution, but all women in society. Barbara Havelkova. The paper shows how despite the apparent non-regulation and non-criminalisation of prostitution in the Czech Republic, the legal framework and its implementation have been tightening around people in prostitution, and have been especially repressive against the visible supply.
The municipal ordinances have enabled harassment and exclusion of people in prostitution out of public spaces. Compliance with this framework has compromised the safety and security of people in prostitution, while non-compliance is either directly or indirectly punishable by criminal law.