Crack and Prostitution: Gender, Myths, and Experiences
- 1 October 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Drug Issues
- Vol. 30 (4) , 767-788
- https://doi.org/10.1177/002204260003000406
Abstract
This paper presents the results from in-depth interviews with 30 crack-using women also working in the sex trade to support their drug use. The gender roles perspective highlights traditional beliefs from past decades about the appeal of cocaine to women, its effects on their sexuality, and the reasons they become prostitutes. These are contrasted with the harsh realities of the dangers and marginalization faced by female crack users who work the streets in the contemporary sex trade. These women operate at the lowest levels of street drug use and prostitution, experience a considerable amount of violence and sexual exploitation, and are subject to riskier practices in their sex work. Their crack addiction fuels this extreme vulnerability and contributes to their highly deviant and stigmatized social image. We conclude that, similar to findings in other studies, the increase in crack consumption and availability has had serious negative repercussions for poor women who were, or became, involved in the sex trade. Moreover, the powerful appeal of crack to these women poses a challenge for harm reduction alternatives and other services that might improve their health and safety.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Drug Dependence, a Chronic Medical IllnessJAMA, 2000
- Harm reduction among cocaine users: reflections on individual intervention and community social capitalInternational Journal of Drug Policy, 1999
- Innocent Addicts, Dope Fiends and Nefarious Traffickers: Illegal Drug Use in 1920s English Canada.Journal of Canadian Studies, 1998
- Frequent medical visits by cocaine-using subjects in a Canadian community: An invisible problem for health practitioners?Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 1997
- WOMEN IN THE STREET‐LEVEL DRUG ECONOMY: CONTINUITY OR CHANGE?*Criminology, 1996
- Women and Drugs Revisited: Female Participation in the Cocaine EconomyJournal of Drug Issues, 1994
- Volume of Cocaine Use and Violence: A Comparison between Men and WomenJournal of Drug Issues, 1991
- Cocaine Use in the Era of Social Reform: The Natural History of a Social Problem in Canada, 1880–1911.Canadian Journal of Law and Society / Revue Canadienne Droit et Société, 1987
- Public Issues and Private Problems: Women and Drug UseJournal of Social Issues, 1982
- Historical and Political Perspective: Women and Drug UseJournal of Social Issues, 1982