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Analysis of Prostitution in Japan

NCJ Number
162607
Journal
International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice Volume: 19 Issue: 1 Dated: (Spring 1995) Pages: 47-60
Author(s)
M Yokoyama
Date Published
1995
Length
14 pages
Annotation
This article describes how Japanese law enforcement agencies have accomplished the de facto decriminalization of prostitution.
Abstract
The Prostitution Prevention Law of 1956 made prostitution a punishable criminal offense in Japan. In the 1960s, some criminologists in the United States advocated the decriminalization of victimless crimes, one of which was prostitution. New ideas regarding the control, or lack thereof, of prostitution were then introduced into Japan, a country where decriminalization was not realized in the dimension of criminal law. Japan rapidly became a society of consumers, in which the demand for prostitution increased, and more prostitutes were compensated financially for their services in disguised brothels or various other call-girl arrangements. However, the total number of offenses exposed by the police under the Prostitution Prevention Law has decreased drastically during the past 30 years. In essence, decriminalization of prostitution has been accomplished by the practices of law enforcement agencies. Table, notes, references

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