Global Women, Colonial Ports is a transnational history of state-regulated prostitution in the Middle East and North Africa between the two world wars. Beginning with international efforts to eradicate traffic in women and children, Liat Kozma examines French and British policies regarding local and foreign prostitutes in the region and shows how these policies affected and interacted with global migration routes of prostitutes and procurers. In so doing, she reveals how colonial domination mediated global mobility of people, practices, and ideas. Kozma weaves together the perspectives of colonial and local feminists with those of medical doctors, demonstrating that debates on prostitution were globalized and that transnational networks of knowledge and activism existed. She also explores the League of Nations’ involvement in this social issue. As a history of the Middle East, the book joins recent scholarship on modern globalization and the integration of the region in global economic, activist, social, and religious interconnectedness.
İçerik tablosu
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. The Advisory Committee on Traffic in Women
2. Regulating Bodies, Regulating Spaces
3. Mapping Mobility
4. The Medical Outlook on Regulation
5. Abolitionism
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Yazar hakkında
Liat Kozma is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the author of
Policing Egyptian Women: Sex, Law, and Medicine in Khedival Egypt.