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Corey Shdaimah and Chrysanthi Leon Published in Inaugural Issue of Criminological Encounters

Associate Professor Corey Shdaimah and Associate Professor Chrysanthi Leon of the University of Delaware have a new paper published in the inaugural issue of Criminological Encounters. "Whose Knowledges?: Moving Beyond Damage-Centered Research in Studies of Women in Street-Based Sex Work" reflects on recent scholarship across disciplines that shows a renewed interest in making social science relevant to social and policy change even as professional organizations have struggled to articulate ethical obligations towards research participants. In the article Shdaimah and Leon draw on their own research with street-based sex workers to explore the implications for scholarship and policy when researchers allow their studies to be guided by the voices of study participants rather than their own assumptions and hypotheses (Capous-Desyllas & Forro, 2014). They describe how our interpretation evolved upon adopting a feminist, qualitative stance that recognizes the agency and authority of respondents to guide the analysis. Shdaimah and Leon join a growing group of scholars who draw attention to the multidimensionality of sex workers’ identities, goals, and daily lives to provide a fuller picture of their lives and experiences (Cheng, 2013; Hail-Jares, Shdaimah, & Leon, 2017). Such a picture inevitably shifts from the options of repair, rescue, or repression as women talk back. Intentional engagement also works against the tendency to “other” the objects of our research and illuminates the systemic factors that shape women’s choices and lives. Their insights apply to research with vulnerable or stigmatized populations across criminological and socio-legal contexts and to criminal justice policy. More details can be found at www.mysswbulletin.info/submit-a-bulletin-announcement

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