The Lived Experiences of Male Sex Workers: A Global Qualitative Meta-Synthesis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Male Sex Work Visibility
1.2. Global Prevalence
1.3. Research Aims
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Meta-Synthesis
2.2. Eligibility Criteria
2.3. Search Strategy
2.4. Data Extraction and Synthesis
2.5. Trustworthiness
3. Results
3.1. Theme 1: Participants Lives’ before Becoming a Sex Worker
Critical moments arose due to separation from family, the death of a close family member who was often a parent and usually the main breadwinner, abuse, and violence in the family, loss of a job, and separation from a romantic partner, the latter in only two cases. Some participants directly linked these critical moments to their entry to sex work, while others described how these moments led to intermediate events that later steered them into sex work.
3.2. Theme 2: Client Relations
However, these relationships are nevertheless based on financial rewards: clients might financially support the sex worker without being offered sex or might engage them in some other activities (like physical work in the garden, cleaning up the apartment, etc.), but the relationship itself—despite being described by our participants as a friendship or caring relationship—is most often a dependent one (p. 233) [80].
3.3. Theme 3: Non-Vocational Intimate Relationships
3.4. Theme 4: Coping with Work-Related Stressors
3.5. Theme 5: Work-Related Violence
Blue unequivocally depended on physical dominance to generate income: “I would purposely start somethin’ to steal clients or wait till you get around the corner—either way, I take your money from you. That’s how it is.” (p. 217) [74]
3.6. Theme 6: Experiences of Discrimination and Social Stigma
One night, we had a gay party in one hotel and we dressed like girls. Female sex workers were also in that hotel looking for clients… One transgender sex worker then cracked a joke by telling the female sex workers that we owned that night and that they would not get any clients. The female sex workers who were already jealous and angry reported us to thugs who came to the hotel to beat and rape some of us.
3.7. Theme 7: Sexual Health Behaviors
3.8. Theme 8: Occupational Identity, Pleasure, Community, and Invisibility
3.9. Theme 9: Exiting the Sex Industry
4. Discussion
4.1. Participants Lives’ before Becoming a Sex Worker
4.2. Client Relations
4.3. Non-Vocational Intimate Relationships
4.4. Coping with Work-Related Stressors
4.5. Work-Related Violence
4.6. Experiences of Discrimination and Social Stigma
4.7. Sexual Health Behaviors
4.8. Occupational Identity, Pleasure, Community, and Invisibility
4.9. Exiting the Sex Industry
4.10. Limitations
4.11. Future Research
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Lead Author (Date) | Region | Sample Size | Age Range | Clientele Served (Man/Woman/Both) | Qualitative Method | Themes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
McCamish (2000) [29] | Southeast Asia | 100 | 19–29 | NS | NS | Findings not presented as themes |
McCamish (2002) [30] | Southeast Asia | 100 | 19–29 | NS | In-Depth Interviews | (1) Economic motivation for sex work; (2) Adherence to general family values; (3) Support for the elderly; (4) The family home; (5) Support in emergencies; (6) Support for younger siblings; (7) Festival time; (8) Reasons for non-support and parental differentiation |
Koken (2004) [31] | North America | 46 | NS | NS | Semi-Structured Interviews | (1) The experience of stigma; (2) Positive feelings about escorting; (3) Negative or ambivalent feelings about escorting; (4) Information-management techniques; (5) Passing; (6) Covering; (7) New emerging strategies; (8) Entrepreneurial framework; (9) “The money makes it worth it”; (10) Sex work as normative within the gay community |
Parsons (2004) [32] | North America | 46 | 22–47 (M = 31.76) | NS | Semi-Structured Interviews | (1) The Role of The Internet for Sex Work; (2) Sexual Risk and Sexual Safety with Clients; (3) Sex Workers as Sex Educators |
Uy (2004) [33] | North America | 46 | 22–47 (M = 31.76) | NS | Open-Ended Interviews | (1) Money; (2) Sex; (3) A Long Day at The Office: Changes to Sexual Energy.; (4) Learning the Tools of The Trade: Changes in Specific Sexual Practices; (5) Taking the Work Home with You: How the Work Affects Sex for Pleasure; (6) The Downside of The Work |
Bimbi (2005) [34] | North America | 50 | NS | Both | Semi-Structured Interview | (1) Quantitative Insights into Barebacking; (2) Qualitative Insights Regarding Barebacking |
Hodge (2005) [35] | North America | NS | NS | NS | Dialectical Analysis | Findings not presented as themes |
Lankenau (2005) [36] | North America | 10 | 19–27 (M = 21.9) | Men | Semi-Structured Interview | (1) Early Exposures to Street Capital: Low SES, Caretaker Fluidity, And Consecutive Housing; (2) Troubled Teens in Public Institutions: Translating Street Capital into Street Competencies; (3) Full Speed into Street Careers: The Coalescence of Street Capital and Street Competencies; (4) Disruptions in Street Careers: Stigma, Hospitalization, Incarceration, Addiction, And Injury |
Leichtentritt (2005) [37] | Middle East | 9 | 16–21 | NS | Life Course History | (1) Life-Long Path to Prostitution; (2) Entering Prostitution; (3) Interpersonal Encounters While Engaging in Prostitution; (4) Consequences of Working in Prostitution |
McCabe (2005) [38] | North America and Europe | 23 (11: North America; 12: Europe) | North America: 20–35 (M = 25.36) Europe: 22–39 (M = 29.42) | NS | Semi-Structured Interview | (1) Family Backgrounds; (2) Homelessness; (3) Entry into Prostitution and Experiences |
Morrison (2005) [39] | North America | 9 | 20–42 (M = 31.9) | NS | Semi-Structured Interview | (1) Escorting Is Volitional (i.e., One Isn’t Forced to Work as An Escort, Rather It Is a Choice One Makes); (2) Escorting Is a Profession (i.e., The Client Is a Customer and The Escort A Service Provider); (3) The Escort Is in Control During Client/Escort Interchanges; And (4) Escorting Is Distinct From And Better Than, Street Prostitution |
Parker (2006) [40] | Europe | 1 | 24 | NS | Case Study | Findings not presented as themes |
Kaye (2007) [41] | North America | 6 | 16–41 | NS | In-Depth Interview | (1) Space And the Material Underpinning of Street Life; (2) Street Families and Emotional Instrumentality; (3) Violence and The Self-Management of Identity |
Klein (2007) [42] | North America | 12 | NS | NS | NS | (1) An Economic Strategy; (2) Drifting into Hustling; (3) Narcissism and Bodybuilding Subculture; (4) Narcissism and Bodybuilding; (5) Gender Narcissism; (6) Homophobia; (7) Hypermasculinity; (8) Authoritarian Personality Traits; (9) Hustling as Personal Conflict |
Leary (2007) [43] | Oceania | 27 | M = 23; Range = NS | NS | Unstructured Interview | (1) Precursor Relationships And SMSW; (2) Engaging the Scene: A Relational Perspective; (3) Relating Within the SMSW Scene; (4) Remain or Go: Pathways Out Of SMSW |
Morrison (2007) [44] | North America | 21 | 20–57 | NS | Interview | (1) Stigma Awareness; (2) Putative Effects of Working in A Stigmatized Industry |
Padilla (2007) [45] | Caribbean | 200 | NS | Men | Ethnography | Findings not presented as themes |
Parsons (2007) [46] | North America | 46 | 22–47 | NS | Semi-Structured Interview | (1) Getting Started as An Escort; (2) The Basics of Business; (3) Staying Healthy, Staying Safe, And Staying Out of Jail; (4) Got Personality? (5) Taking Care Of Yourself; (6) Proceed With Caution |
Fernández-Dávila (2008) [47] | South America | 30 | 18–30 | Men | Interviews and focus group | (1) The Context of The Interactions; (2) Sexual Interactions and Compensated Sex; (3) Meeting Places; (4) Sexual Risk |
Kong (2008) [48] | East Asia | 30 | 19–31 (M = 23.3) | NS | Semi-Structured Interview | (1) Reported Condom Use, AIDS Knowledge, Perceived Risk, and HIV Testing; (2) Risk Factors Affecting Condom Use |
Padilla (2008) [49] | Caribbean | 72 | Santo Domingo: M = 24.8 Boca Chica: M = 26.1 | Men | Ethnography | (1) Experiences Of Stigma and Social Inequality Related to Sex Work and Homosexual Behavior; (2) Strategies to Manage Stigma Related to Sex Work or Homosexual Behaviors; (3) Men’s Predictions Regarding Social Stigma Upon Real or Imagined Disclosure of Sex Work And/Or Homosexual Behavior; (4) The Effects of Stigma and Social Inequality on Men’s Decisions to Employ Risk Reduction Techniques with Female Partners |
Smith (2008) [50] | North America | 30 | 18–35 (M = 22.4) | NS | Semi-Structured Interview | (1) Health Concerns; (2) Emotional Intimacy; (3) Client Attractiveness; (4) Relationships; (5) Structural Work Factors |
Wilcox (2008) [51] | Europe | 9 | 19–45 | Both | Interview | (1) Motivations; (2) Involvement in Sex Work; (3) Leaving Sex Work; (4) Risks and Precautions; (5) Victims or Businessmen? |
Jones (2009) [52] | North America | 4 | NS | NS | Structured Interview | Findings not presented as themes |
Kong (2009) [4] | East Asia | 15 | 17–39 (M = 27) | NS | In-Depth Interview | (1) Perceived Stigma; (2) Coping Strategies: Reducing Stigma and Accomplishing Masculinity |
Lorway (2009) [53] | South Asia | 70 | 21–23 (M = 22) | NS | Interview | Findings not presented as themes |
Okal (2009) [54] | East Africa | 36 | 17–45 | Both | Structured Interview and Focus Group | (1) Context Of First Sexual Encounter and Entry into Sex Work; (2) Sexual Geography; (3) Stigma, Discrimination, and Violence; (4) Condom Use and Perceptions of HIV Risk |
Ings (2010) [55] | Oceania | 30 | NS | NS | NS | Findings not presented as themes |
Jamel (2011) [56] | Europe | 50 | 20–57 | NS | Web-based survey; tick-box questionnaire; interviews | (1) Sexual Violence; (2) Drug and Alcohol Consumption and Condom Use; (3) Young Escorts at Risk; (4) Perceived Vulnerability of Female Sex Workers; (5) Absence of Client-Perpetrated Sexual Violence; (6) Gay Men Are Non-Confrontational; (7) The Secretive Nature of Clients; (8) Lucky; (9) No Formalized Warning System |
Nurena (2011) [57] | South America | 42 | 18–45 (M = 27) | NS | Ethnography | (1) Patterns Of Male Sex Work; (2) Social Vulnerabilities; (3) HIV/STI-Risk Perception and Behaviours; (4) Alcohol and Other Substance Use |
Kong (2012) [58] | East Asia | 3 | 25–28 | Men | Ethnography | Findings not presented as themes |
McLean (2012) [59] | Oceania | 23 | NS | NS | Semi-Structured Interview | (1) Experiences Of Stigma; (2) Identity Management; (3) Impact on Sex Life; (4) Lack of Engagement with Existing Services; (5) Lack of Engagement with Other Workers |
Muessig (2012) [60] | East Asia | 40 | 16–33 (M = 21) | Men | In-Depth Interviews | Findings not presented as themes |
Mendoza (2013) [61] | North America | 12 | 18–37 | Men | Semi-Structured Interviews | (1) Space And Sex in Puerto Vallarta; (2) Motivations for Involvement: Keeping in Business; (3) The Body and Sexualities |
Niccolai (2013) [62] | Eastern Europe | 12 | 18–31 (M = 23.75) | Men | In-Depth Interviews | (1) Patterns Of Male Sex Work; (2) Social Vulnerabilities; (3) HIV/STI-Risk Perception and Behaviours; (4) Alcohol and Other Substance Use |
Okanlawon (2013) [63] | West Africa | 6 | M = 23 | Men | In-Depth Interviews | (1) Reasons For Entering Male Sex Work; (2) Risky Sexual Behaviour and Condom Use with Clients; (3) Other Risks and Human Rights Violations; (4) The Need for Social Protection; (5) Male Sex Workers and Money-Making Rituals; (6) Relationships with Female Sex Workers; (7) Ways Forward |
Scull (2013) [64] | North America | 22 | 22–44 (M = 32.5) | Women | Ethnography | (1) Embodied Aspects of Exotic Dance; (2) Gender and Stripping; (3) Dancer’s Relationships; (4) The Self-Concept |
Smith (2013) [65] | North America | 38 | 18–35 | NS | Semi-Structured Interview | (1) Environment And Behavior: Interactions Between Situation and Action; (2) Environment and Cognition: Interactions Between Situation and Expectation; (3) Behavior and Cognition: Interactions Between Action and Expectation |
Bayer (2014) [66] | South America | 40 | 17–23 | NS | Semi-Structured Interview | (1) Entry Into Sex Work: Establishing the Link Between Economy and Affection; (2) Permanence in Sex Work: Cementing the Tie Between Economy and Affection; (3) Perceived Risk of And Vulnerability to HIV And Other STIs and Related Prevention Practices: The Continued Domination of Economics and Affections |
Corriveau (2014) [67] | North America | 19 | 19–41 | NS | Semi-Structured Interview | (1) (Mis)Understanding the Law and Its Enforcement; (2) Strategies to Minimize the Risk Of…; |
Aunon (2015) [68] | Middle East | 16 | 19–31 | NS | In-Depth Semi-Structured Interviews | (1) Disclosure Of Homosexuality and Engagement in Sex Work; (2) Condom Use with Clients and Non-Client Partners; (3) HIV And STI Testing |
Closson (2015) [69] | Southeast Asia | 23 | M = 24 (SD = 3.9) * | Both | In-Depth Interviews | (1) Economic Need as A Main Reason to Engage in Sex Work; (2) Experiences of Stigma; (3) Stigma Management Techniques: Non-Disclosure and Emphasizing Economic Imperatives; (4) Stigma Management as A Challenge to Sexual Communication |
McLean (2015) [70] | Oceania | 23 | NS | NS | Interviews | (1) The Declining Street Trade; (2) The Decline of The Brothel and Agency; (3) Private Escorts and Print Media; (4) Ease, Convenience, and Accessibility of Internet-Based Work; (5) Anonymity, Autonomy, and Safety; (6) Economic Gain; (7) Informal Engagement in Internet-Based Male Sex Work (IMSW) |
Smith (2015) [71] | North America | 40 | 18–35 | NS | Ethnography | (1) Customer Service; (2) Stress Related to Sexual Activity; (3) Stigma and Social Challenges |
Hall (2016) [72] | Europe | 60 (Czech Republic = 14; Prague = 46) | NS | Men | Case Study | Findings not presented as themes |
Kong (2016) [73] | East Asia | 30 | NS | NS | Ethnography | (1) The City as The Site for Becoming a Money Boy; (2) Strategies for Handling Triple Stigmatisation; (3) The Temporary Urban Citizen and The Hukou System; (4) Illegal Labourer and The Male Sex Industry; (5) ‘Improper’ Gay Man and The Cosmopolitan Gay Community; (6) Exit or Moneyboyisation? |
Oselin (2016) [74] | North America | 19 | 25–51 | NS | Ethnography | (1) Male Sex Workers’ Repudiation of Violence; (2) Clashes Impede Business Opportunities; (3) Engagement in Fights Amplifies Risk; (4) Sex Work Facilitates Pacifist Masculinity |
Ryan (2016) [75] | Europe | 18 | 19–27 | NS | In-Depth Interviews | (1) The (Re)Construction of The Male Sex Worker; (2) Building and Displaying Bodies; (3) Watchers And ‘Meeters’: Generating Social Media ‘Fans’; |
Ellison (2017) [76] | Europe | 15 | 18–22 (M = 19) | NS | Ethnography | Findings not presented as themes |
Kumar (2018) [77] | Oceania | 20 | 20–30 | Men | Semi-Structured Interviews | Findings not presented as themes |
Lasco (2017) [78] | Southeast Asia | 10 | 18–25 | NS | Ethnography | (1) The Context: An Informal Economy; (2) Sex Work: “Easy Money”; (3) Pampagilas: Drugs as Performance Enhancers; (4) The “Local Moral World” Of the Port Community; (5) Masculinity and Sex Work; (6) Masculinity and Drug Use; (7) Risk and Masculinity |
Oselin (2018) [79] | North America | 18 | 25–51 | NS | Ethnography | (1) Identity Talk: A Tactic to Lessen Stigma; (2) Organizational Alignment: An Identity Tied to Recovery; (3) Rejecting Recovery: Crafting and Claiming Alternative Identities |
Kuhar (2018) [80] | Southeastern Europe | 9 | 24–40 | Men | Semi-Structured Interviews | (1) Entrance Into Sex Work; (2) Clients; (3) The Use of Technology |
Oselin (2019) [81] | North America | 17 | 25–51 (M = 42) | NS | In-Depth Interviews and Conversational Interviews | (1) Financial Need: Entering the Street Trade; (2) Choosing Clients, Reimagining Themselves; (3) Status Symbols, Markers, and Associations; (4) Sociopsychological Effects and Bodily Capital |
Peters (2019) [82] | South Africa | 23 | NS | NS | Narrative Interviews | (1) Narratives Of Violence; (2) “Real Men” Are Heterosexual; (3) Being A Black Man in Cape Town: The Challenges and Benefits; (4) Constructing the Dignified Sex Worker |
Qiao (2019) [83] | Africa | 15 | 19–38 | NS | Interviews | Findings not presented as themes |
Srivastava (2019) [84] | Southeast Asia | 10 | 20–17 (M = 23.8) | NS | Case Study | (1) Entering Transactional Sex; (2) Soliciting Practices; (3) Role of Pimps; (4) Clients |
Tsang (2019) [85] | Africa | 15 | NS | Men | In-Depth Interviews | (1) Drivers Of Stigma; (2) Multilayered Stigma and Vulnerabilities for HIV Infection |
Tsang (2019) [86] | East Asia | 16 | 19–38 | Men | In-Depth Interviews | (1) Money Boys’ Negotiations of Home and Spatial Environment in The City; (2) Spatial Exclusion and Necropolitics of Substance Abuse |
Edeza (2020) [87] | North America | 23 | M = 30.8 (SD = 8.3) * | NS | In-Depth Interviews | (1) Drivers Of Inconsistent Condom Use; (2) Interest in Prep to Reduce Worry About HIV Infection; (3) Interest in Prep Relating to Protecting Intimate Sexual Partners; (4) Expected Changes in Sexual Behavior |
Henriksen (2020) [88] | Europe | 21 | 22–52 | NS | Semi-Structured Interviews | (1) Men’s Experiences of Selling Sex; (2) Care and Support |
Legg (2020) [89] | North America | 76 | 22–62 (M = 39) | NS | Narrative Interview | Findings not reported as themes |
Phua (2020) [90] | South America | 45 | NS | NS | In-Depth Interviews | (1) Playing Defensive; (2) Visual Verification; (3) Governing Gossip |
Lennes (2021) [91] | Europe | 1 | 29 | Men | Case Study | Findings not reported as themes |
Ruiz-Burga (2021) [92] | Europe | 25 | 24–44 (M = 33) | NS | In-Depth Interviews | (1) Leaving The Country of Origin; (2) Migration Toward The UK; (3) Sex Work in London; (4) The Use of Health Services in The UK And Sexual Health Issues Reported; (5) Sexual Health Issues Reported |
Trudeau (2021) [93] | North America | 14 | >25 | NS | Focus Groups | (1) The Hustle of Sex Work; (2) Sex Work as Survival; (3) Entrepreneurs Despite the Circumstances |
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Curtis, M.G.; Boe, J.L. The Lived Experiences of Male Sex Workers: A Global Qualitative Meta-Synthesis. Sexes 2023, 4, 222-255. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes4020016
Curtis MG, Boe JL. The Lived Experiences of Male Sex Workers: A Global Qualitative Meta-Synthesis. Sexes. 2023; 4(2):222-255. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes4020016
Chicago/Turabian StyleCurtis, Michael G., and Joshua L. Boe. 2023. "The Lived Experiences of Male Sex Workers: A Global Qualitative Meta-Synthesis" Sexes 4, no. 2: 222-255. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes4020016
APA StyleCurtis, M. G., & Boe, J. L. (2023). The Lived Experiences of Male Sex Workers: A Global Qualitative Meta-Synthesis. Sexes, 4(2), 222-255. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes4020016