Our collection holds primary source material relating to prostitution, human trafficking, the treatment of venereal diseases, sexual health and sexuality. The majority of the material dates from the late 19th to the mid 20th century.
Here are some highlights selected by Gillian Murphy, Curator for Equality, Rights and Citizenship.
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Josephine Butler campaigned for the repeal of the Contagious Diseases Acts of the 1860s which was finally successful in 1886. Her letters provide an insight into this campaign.
A related topic to prostitution is human trafficking, historically known as the ‘white slave trade’.
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International Abolitionist Federation was founded in 1875 by Josephine Butler to campaign for the legal and constitutional rights of prostitute women, to abolish traffic in persons and to eliminate the marginalisation of women and children internationally.
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Association for Moral and Social Hygiene was founded in 1915 and renamed the Josephine Butler Society in 1962. It campaigned against state regulation of prostitution in India and attempted to repeal the provisions of the Defence of the Realm Acts in the First and Second World Wars. It was also concerned with a wide range of issues relating to sexuality in general.
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Josephine Butler Society Library contains a unique collection of books, pamphlets, journals, leaflets and campaigning documents. Printed material dates from the late nineteenth to mid-twentieth centuries.
You can find more material on this topic using a person’s name, by organisation, by event, by keyword eg age of consent, child prostitution, criminal law, criminology, prostitution, public health, sexuality, sexual offences, social morality, social purity, traffic in women and children, venereal disease, white slave trade in these catalogues.
View lists of further resources covering:
Most of the material highlighted here is stored in closed access and must be consulted in The Women’s Library Reading Room. Find out how to book your place and order material on our reading room access page.
If you need specific help with any of the collections mentioned here get in touch with our Curator for Equality, Rights and Citizenship, Gillian Murphy.