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Mobility and sex work: why, where, when? A typology of female-sex-worker mobility in Zimbabwe

Author

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  • Davey, Calum
  • Dirawo, Jeffrey
  • Mushati, Phillis
  • Magutshwa, Sitholubuhle
  • Hargreaves, James R.
  • Cowan, Frances M.

Abstract

Sex-worker mobility may have implications for health and access to care but has not been described in sub-Saharan Africa. We described sex-worker mobility in Zimbabwe and a mobility typology using data from 2591 and 2839 female sex workers in 14 sites from 2013 and 2016. We used latent class analysis to identify a typology of mobile sex workers. More women travelled for work in 2016 (59%) than in 2013 (27%), usually to find clients with more money (57% of the journeys), spending a median of 21 (2013) and 24 (2016) days away. A five-class mixture model best fitted the data, with 39% women in an infrequent work-mobility class, 21% in a domestic-high-mobility class, 16% in an international-high-mobility class, 16% in an infrequent opportunistic-non-work-mobility class, and 7% who travel with clients. More-mobile classes were better educated; risk behaviours differed by class. Mobility is increasing among sex worker in Zimbabwe, multi-faceted, and not explained by other vulnerabilities.

Suggested Citation

  • Davey, Calum & Dirawo, Jeffrey & Mushati, Phillis & Magutshwa, Sitholubuhle & Hargreaves, James R. & Cowan, Frances M., 2019. "Mobility and sex work: why, where, when? A typology of female-sex-worker mobility in Zimbabwe," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 220(C), pages 322-330.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:socmed:v:220:y:2019:i:c:p:322-330
    DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.11.027
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    References listed on IDEAS

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