Marxist Feminism And Prostitution

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Marxist Feminism theory
A contemporary theory that can be applied to sex trafficking and prostitution is Marxist Feminism. Marxist Feminism is a sociology theory that follows the beliefs of Karl Marx. The theory can be applied to prostitution in a useful way by exposing the power structures that support sex work.
Marxist feminists claim the source of the oppression of women is capitalism (Tong, 1998). Capitalism is, “an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state” (Capitalism, n.d.). This means that people control the trade and industry aspect of a country and there is little state involvement in regulating those sectors. Karl Marx was one of the …show more content…

The notion that capitalism exploits women explains the motivation of women who migrate into sex work. Migration into sex work because of poverty is a class issue. Marxist feminist theory also supports the notion that the bodies of sex workers are commodities because as sex workers bodies are for sale (Tong, 1998). Prostitution is based on the sale and purchase of a commodity contingent with the ideal of supply and demand.
Commodities have both a use value and an exchange value. Although some sex workers receive some type of cash value during such exchange, more cases involve sex workers who perform in conditions of slavery, where they are sold and bought as commodities themselves, and then put to work for the pimps (Eglitis, 2005). Furthermore exploitation results from the fact that the sex worker does not own the product of their labor but merely their capacity to labor. Even when the wage is paid at the full value of the labor power, a fair exchange in capitalist terms, the sex worker is still exploited.
Capitalism And …show more content…

The supply side in most cases involves the movement or migration of people from their countries or places of origin often plagued with several social, economic, political as well as cultural factors that make the victims to the advanced countries vulnerable.
Generally economic factors are the most relevant factor that fosters human trafficking. In fact the economic drive of human trafficking is double edged and plays out in both the demand and supply side of human trafficking. From the supply side in which victims are uprooted to participate in human trafficking are usually from countries where poverty is wide-spread. If people are not vulnerable to be lured, then trafficking would decrease substantially.
The legal avoidance by traffickers also makes the smuggling of natives from underdeveloped to advanced countries more accessible. Corrupt governments in developing countries sometimes aid traffickers which make them harder to detect. Many times victims are given false identities which add to the difficulty in

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