Job Attributes and Mental Health: A Comparative Study of Sex Work and Hairstyling
A growing literature advocates for using a labor perspective to study sex work. According to this approach, sex work involves many of the costs, benefits, and possibilities for exploitation that are common to many jobs. We add to the field with an examination of job attributes and mental health. Our...
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doaj-de5af4f02bf9477dbcaa3528d8a4b45c2021-01-25T00:01:12ZengMDPI AGSocial Sciences2076-07602021-01-0110353510.3390/socsci10020035Job Attributes and Mental Health: A Comparative Study of Sex Work and HairstylingBill McCarthy0Mikael Jansson1Cecilia Benoit2School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers University Newark, 123 Washington Street, Newark, NJ 07102-3094, USACanadian Institute for Substance Use Research, University of Victoria, 2300 McKenzie Ave., Victoria, BC V8N 5M8, CanadaCanadian Institute for Substance Use Research, University of Victoria, 2300 McKenzie Ave., Victoria, BC V8N 5M8, CanadaA growing literature advocates for using a labor perspective to study sex work. According to this approach, sex work involves many of the costs, benefits, and possibilities for exploitation that are common to many jobs. We add to the field with an examination of job attributes and mental health. Our analysis is comparative and uses data from a panel study of people in sex work and hairstyling. We examined job attributes that may differ across these occupations, such as stigma and customer hostility, as well as those that may be more comparable, such as job insecurity, income, and self-employment. Our analysis used mixed-effects regression and included an array of time-varying and time-invariant variables. Our results showed negative associations between mental health and job insecurity and stigma, for both hairstyling and sex work. We also found two occupation-specific relationships: for sex work, limited discretion to make decisions while at work was negatively related to mental health, whereas for hairstyling, mental health was positively associated with self-employment. Our results highlight the usefulness of an inter-occupational labor perspective for understanding the mental health consequences of being in sex work compared to hairstyling.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/10/2/35sex workmental healthjob attributesjob insecuritystigmaservice work |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Bill McCarthy Mikael Jansson Cecilia Benoit |
spellingShingle |
Bill McCarthy Mikael Jansson Cecilia Benoit Job Attributes and Mental Health: A Comparative Study of Sex Work and Hairstyling Social Sciences sex work mental health job attributes job insecurity stigma service work |
author_facet |
Bill McCarthy Mikael Jansson Cecilia Benoit |
author_sort |
Bill McCarthy |
title |
Job Attributes and Mental Health: A Comparative Study of Sex Work and Hairstyling |
title_short |
Job Attributes and Mental Health: A Comparative Study of Sex Work and Hairstyling |
title_full |
Job Attributes and Mental Health: A Comparative Study of Sex Work and Hairstyling |
title_fullStr |
Job Attributes and Mental Health: A Comparative Study of Sex Work and Hairstyling |
title_full_unstemmed |
Job Attributes and Mental Health: A Comparative Study of Sex Work and Hairstyling |
title_sort |
job attributes and mental health: a comparative study of sex work and hairstyling |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Social Sciences |
issn |
2076-0760 |
publishDate |
2021-01-01 |
description |
A growing literature advocates for using a labor perspective to study sex work. According to this approach, sex work involves many of the costs, benefits, and possibilities for exploitation that are common to many jobs. We add to the field with an examination of job attributes and mental health. Our analysis is comparative and uses data from a panel study of people in sex work and hairstyling. We examined job attributes that may differ across these occupations, such as stigma and customer hostility, as well as those that may be more comparable, such as job insecurity, income, and self-employment. Our analysis used mixed-effects regression and included an array of time-varying and time-invariant variables. Our results showed negative associations between mental health and job insecurity and stigma, for both hairstyling and sex work. We also found two occupation-specific relationships: for sex work, limited discretion to make decisions while at work was negatively related to mental health, whereas for hairstyling, mental health was positively associated with self-employment. Our results highlight the usefulness of an inter-occupational labor perspective for understanding the mental health consequences of being in sex work compared to hairstyling. |
topic |
sex work mental health job attributes job insecurity stigma service work |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/10/2/35 |
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