Abstract

This article draws on empirical research to develop understandings of child prostitution, previously theorised on the basis of children’s rights, feminist, and structure/agency debates, largely ignoring children’s own understandings of their involvement in prostitution. Conducted in Malawi, which is one of the economically poorest countries in the world, the study goes to the heart of questions of inequality and child protection. Within a participatory research framework, nineteen girls and young women used visual methods to generate images representing their experiences of prostitution. Individual and group discussions were used to illuminate the meanings and significance of their images. With the exception of the youngest, participants understood their initial involvement in prostitution as a means of survival in the face of poverty and/or parental death, or escape from violent relationships, experiences that were subsequently mirrored by exploitation and violence within prostitution. Using the lens of the capability approach, we capture the complexity of child prostitution, demonstrating the ambiguous agency of participants in the face of deeply embedded patriarchal cultural norms that constrained their choices and limited their freedom to pursue valued lives. We end by reflecting critically on the theoretical and methodological contributions of the study, making policy and practice recommendations and identifying opportunities for further research.

Highlights

  • Introduction and BackgroundThis article focuses on how complex intersecting inequalities (Walby et al 2012), based on poverty gender and age inform questions of child protection for girls that are involved in prostitution in Malawi

  • Focusing on Malawi, the objective of the study that is presented here was to further understanding of child prostitution within the context of current evidence and argument, produced predominantly by researchers from the global north, and by paying specific attention to the particular cultural and socio-economic contexts that are shaped by, and reflect, the inherent tensions of international and national politics in the wider arena of global ‘development’ (Banik and Chinsinga 2016)

  • Following this introduction to the politics and relevant policies in Malawi, and to the theoretical frameworks that have shaped thinking about child prostitution, we move to the empirical study that addressed the following research questions: Why and how do children and young people in Malawi engage in prostitution? How do children and young people understand their involvement in prostitution? How do social, economic, political, and cultural issues influence and shape children and young people’s involvement in, and routes out of, prostitution?

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Summary

Introduction and Background

This article focuses on how complex intersecting inequalities (Walby et al 2012), based on poverty gender and age inform questions of child protection for girls that are involved in prostitution in Malawi. It presents an empirical study designed to develop a nuanced, contextualised understanding from the perspectives of those with experience of involvement in prostitution as children

Poverty and Politics
Gender Inequalities
Child Protection
Child Prostitution
Children’s Rights
Feminist Perspectives
Structure and Agency
The Capability Approach
Research Questions
Design
Sample
Ethical Considerations
Data Collection
Data Analysis
Results and Discussion
Implications
Theoretical Understanding
Methodological Implications
Implications for Policy and Practice
Opportunities for Further Research
Full Text
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