Julia Laite, is Reader in Modern History at the Department of History, Classics and Archaeology at Birkbeck, University of London, UK. She researches and teaches on the history of women, crime, sexuality and migration in the nineteenth and twentieth-century British world. She is the author of Common Prostitutes and Ordinary Citizens: Commercial Sex in London (Palgrave, 2012), and The Girl Who Disappears: Sex, Work and Crime in the Early Twentieth Century World (forthcoming in 2021). Samantha Caslin, is Lecturer in History at the Department of History at the University of Liverpool, UK. She researches and teaches modern British history, with particular interests in gender history, prostitution and policy, and feminism. She recently published Save the Womanhood: Vice, Urban Immorality and Social Control in Liverpool, c.1900–1976 (2018).
“This volume remains an essential reading for those wanting to know more about prostitution and the opinions surrounding it in liberal Britain. By making these sources available, Caslin and Laite give a much more nuanced picture of what the police, the magistrates, the civil society, academics and social workers thought of prostitution at the time, than what a study limited to the Wolfenden official report could have ever offered us.” (Marion Pluskota, Journal of British Studies, Vol. 60 (4), October, 2021)