This book examines the history, theological beliefs and current contextual practices of faith-based NGOs who work in the area of human trafficking involving the sex industry.
Lauren McGrow resides on the southern edge of Australia and her research focus includes sex work, gender, the body, and play. She is Research Fellow at Charles Sturt University, Australia and is the author of Missionary Positions: A Postcolonial Feminist Perspective on Sex Work and Faith-Based Outreach from Australia (2017).
Introduction: An Outrage Against Any Decent People
Lauren McGrow
1 Abolition Mommas: Evangelical Women as Exceptional Citizens in the Fight to End "Global Sex Trafficking"
Carly Daniel-Hughes
2 Do You See This (Wo)man? Lessons Learned from Sex Workers
Hannah Estabrook
3 Walking with Women in Sex Work: An Appraisal of the Role of the Nigerian Conference of Women Religious
Nkiruka Okafor and Lauren McGrow
4 Human Dignity in Sex Work and the Catholic Tradition
Mark A. Levand
5 'A Catholic and an Agnostic Walk into a Homeless Camp...' Collaborating Across Religious Differences
Yvonne C. Zimmerman
6 Towards an Ethical Framework for Practice: Three "Touchstones" for Faith-based Organizations at the Margins
Lauren McGrow
7 Jesus Ate With Pras: Christianity and Commercial Sex Work in the Caribbean
Anna Kasafi Perkins and Dane C. Lewis
8 When Survival Precedes Faith: Decolonial Perspectives on the Ethical Dilemma Confronting Female Christian Sex Workers in Africa
Beatrice Dedaa Okyere-Manu, Margaret Ssebunya and Sophia Chirongoma
9 Afterword - To Shape the Changes for Which We Long
Yvonne C. Zimmerman