Simanti Dasgupta is Associate Professor of Anthropology and the director of the International Studies Program at the University of Dayton. Her research interest lies in the politics of citizenship and belonging in postcolonial and neoliberal nation-states. She has published in PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review; Anti-Trafficking Review, Opendemocracy: Beyond trafficking and slavery and The Conversation. She is the author of BITS of Belonging: Information Technology, Water and Neoliberal Governance in India (Temple University Press, 2015).
'A richly textured ethnography of sex work and workers in a red-light district of Kolkata, India. There have been quite a few studies of the pioneering sex workers' organisation, Durbar, which led the shift in nomenclature from 'prostitution' to 'sex work' in India and the movements for unionization and labour rights in the sector. This study shows the links between public health concerns and the articulation of rights in sex work, a historical connection from nineteenth-century colonial times. Dasgupta successfully moves beyond the unhelpful polarization between abolition and regulation to focus on agency and the modes and processes of self-regulation. This brilliant book brings to vibrant life the voice of the sex worker, agent of her labour and mobility, and fashioning her own politics.' Samita Sen, University of Cambridge 'Prophylactic Rights is a meticulously researched and engagingly written analysis of the government's surveillance of sex workers in the context of neoliberal market reforms in India. Simanti Dasgupta's critical contributions are to identify the many connections between anti-trafficking measures and HIV/AIDS prevention, and to advance the emerging conversation between medical and legal anthropology. Dasgupta sensitively documents the complexity of lived experiences of women sex workers, illustrating how sex workers are both constructed as new subjects of governmentality and inspired to exercise collective agency through contemporary labor rights. Prophylactic Rights is a must-read for all those interested in feminist anthropology, medical anthropology of HIV/AIDS, and the anthropology of human rights.' Richard Ashby Wilson, University of Connecticut School of Law