AgustinLM (2005) New research directions: The cultural studies of commercial sex. Sexualities8(5): 618–631.
2.
AtkinsMLaingM (2012) Walking the beat and doing business: Exploring spaces of male sex work and public sex. Sexualities15(5–6): 622–643.
3.
BernsteinE (2007) Sex work for the middle classes. Sexualities10(4): 473–488.
4.
BorisEGilmoreSParreñasR (2010) Sexual labors: Interdisciplinary perspectives toward sex as work. Sexualities13(2): 131–137.
5.
BrentsBGHausbeckK (2007) Marketing sex: US legal brothels and late capitalist consumption. Sexualities10(4): 425–439.
6.
Capous DesyllasM (2013) Representations of sex workers' needs and aspirations: A case for arts-based research. Sexualities16(7): 772–787.
7.
ChengS (2012) Private lives of public women: Photos of sex workers (minus the sex) in South Korea. Sexualities16(2–3): 30–42.
8.
CollinsD (2012) Gay hospitality as desiring labor: Contextualizing transnational sexual labor. Sexualities15(5–6): 538–553.
9.
FrankK (1998) The production of identity and the negotiation of intimacy in a ‘gentleman's club’. Sexualities1(2): 175–201.
10.
GarciaA (2010) Continuous moral economies: The state regulation of bodies and sex work in Cuba. Sexualities13(2): 171–196.
11.
HallT (2007) Rent-boys, barflies, and kept men: Men involved in sex with men for compensation in Prague. Sexualities10(4): 457–472.
12.
HammondNKingstonS (2014) Experiencing stigma as sex work researchers in professional and personal lives. Sexualities17(3): 329–347.
13.
HoangKK (2010) Economies of emotion, familiarity, fantasy, and desire: Emotional labor in Ho Chi Minh City's sex industry. Sexualities13(2): 255–272.
14.
HuschkeSSchubotzD (2016) Commercial sex, clients, and Christian morals: Paying for sex in Ireland. Sexualities19(7): 869–887.
15.
LiddiardK (2014) ‘I never felt like she was just doing it for the money’: Disabled men's intimate (gendered) realities of purchasing sexual pleasure and intimacy. Sexualities17(7): 837–855.
16.
LindemannD (2011) BDSM as therapy?. Sexualities14(2): 151–172.
17.
MaiN (2012) The fractal queerness of non-heteronormative migrants working in the UK sex industry. Sexualities15(5–6): 570–585.
18.
MillerJNicholsA (2012) Identity, sexuality and commercial sex among Sri Lankan nachchi. Sexualities15(5–6): 554–569.
19.
OchaWEarthB (2013) Identity diversification among transgender sex workers in Thailand's sex tourism industry. Sexualities16(1–2): 195–216.
20.
PinskyDLeveyTG (2015) ‘A world turned upside down’: Emotional labour and the professional dominatrix. Sexualities18(4): 438–458.
21.
ReadKW (2013) Queering the brothel: Identity construction and performance in Carson City, Nevada. Sexualities16(3–4): 467–486.
22.
Rivers-MooreM (2012) Almighty gringos: Masculinity and value in sex tourism. Sexualities15(7): 850–870.
23.
RossBL (2010) Sex and (evacuation from) the city: The moral and legal regulation of sex workers in Vancouver's West End, 1975–1985. Sexualities13(2): 197–218.
24.
SandersT (2006) Sexing up the subject: Methodological nuances in researching the female sex industry. Sexualities9(4): 449–468.
25.
SmithEM (2017) ‘It gets very intimate for me’: Discursive boundaries of pleasure and performance in sex work. Sexualities20(3): 344–363.
26.
SmithN (2012) Body issues: The political economy of male sex work. Sexualities15(5–6): 586–603.
27.
ThomasJNWilliamsDJ (2016) Getting off on sex research: A methodological commentary on the sexual desires of sex researchers. Sexualities19(1–2): 83–97.