Abstract

Demands for vice police reform resulted in an Austrian-wide re-examination of regulation. This chapter analyzes Viennese debates over prostitution to demonstrate that the regulationists in the police headquarters and the Lower Austrian provincial government dominated the conversation about prostitution in Vienna, and thus policy in Austria until the end of the Monarchy, despite ongoing, scattered calls for more thoroughgoing reform. While government officials sought to protect public health and morals, police officials’ main concern initially was preventing a repetition of the Riehl scandal. Proposals involving increased police surveillance of brothels and prostitutes, which reflected the state’s ongoing scrutiny of a particular class of female citizens long categorized as “idle” or “criminal,” were quickly instituted. Other proposed changes were made more slowly or not at all.

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