3 Quotes & Sayings By Janice G Raymond

Dr. Janice G. Raymond is the author of The Transsexual Empire: The Making of the She-Male (Second Edition) and The Transsexual Empire Strikes Back. She is Professor of Sociology at the University of Texas at Austin, where she has taught since 1981, and is a member of the American Sociological Association and International Society for Heterosexual Equality (ISHE) Read more

She was born in 1937 in Springfield, Ohio, and received her Ph.D. in sociology from Ohio State University in 1974. Her research interests include transgender studies, sex work, sexuality, sexual violence, women's studies, queer theory/literature/theory, and sexual harassment law.

Her academic articles have appeared in many scholarly journals including Social Problems, Women's Studies Quarterly, Social Problems, Women's Studies International Forum, Journal of Homosexuality, Women & Therapy, Women & Therapy Journal, Gender & Society Review , Performing Arts Journal , Sexuality & Culture , Women's Studies International Forum , Journal of Homosexuality , Women's Studies International Forum , Gender & Society Review , Sexualities , Social Problems , Sexuality & Culture , Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society .

1
If women really choose prostitution, why is it mostly marginalized and disadvantaged women who do? If we want to discuss the issue of choice, let’s look at who is doing the actual choosing in the context of prostitution. Surely the issue is not why women allegedly choose to be in prostitution, but why men choose to buy the bodies of millions of women and children worldwide and call it sex. Philosophically, the response to the choice debate is ‘not’ to deny that women are capable of choosing within contexts of powerlessness, but to question how much real value, worth, and power these so-called choices confer. Politically, the question becomes, should the state sanction the sex industry based on the claim that some women choose prostitution when most women’s choice is actually 'compliance’ to the only options available? When governments idealize women’s alleged choice to be in prostitution by legalizing, decriminalizing, or regulating the sex industry, they endorse a new range of 'conformity’ for women. Increasingly, what is defended as a choice is not a triumph over oppression but another name for it. Janice G. Raymond
2
In the studies I have directed, and in my international experience speaking with women in prostitution, the majority of women in prostitution come from marginalized groups with a history of sexual abuse, drug and alcohol dependencies, poverty or financial disadvantage, lack of education, and histories of other vulnerabilities. These factors characterize women in both off and on-street locations. A large number of women in prostitution are pimped or drawn into the sex industry at an early age. These are women whose lives will not change for the better if prostitution is decriminalized. Many have entrenched problems that are best addressed not by keeping women indoors but in establishing programs where women can be provided with an exit strategy and the services that they need to regain their lost lives. There is little evidence that decriminalization or legalization of prostitution improves conditions for women in prostitution, on or off the street. It certainly makes things better for the sex industry, which is provided with legal standing, and the government that enjoys increased revenues from accompanying regulation. . Janice G. Raymond