Maddy Coy

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Maddy Coy
Academic work
InstitutionsLondon Metropolitan University
Notable worksProstitution, Harm and Gender Inequality: Theory, Research and Policy
WebsiteLondon Metropolitan University

Maddy Coy is the deputy director of the Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit (CWASU), London Metropolitan University and has collaborated with the End Violence Against Women Coalition (EVAW).[1]

Career[edit]

Prior to becoming a researcher, Coy worked for several years with sexually exploited girls and women. She has published a number of articles and book chapters on the sex industry, including links between local authority care and sexual exploitation, women's experiences of selling sex and men's motivations for buying sex. More recently Coy has focused on developing a gendered analysis of sexualised popular culture, including how this might be addressed in popular approaches and everyday practice with young people.[2]

Bibliography[edit]

Books[edit]

  • Coy, Maddy (2012). Prostitution, harm and gender inequality: theory, research and policy. Farnham, Surrey, England Burlington, Vermont: Ashgate. ISBN 9781409405450.

Chapters in books[edit]

  • Coy, Maddy (2012), "Introduction: Prostitution, harm and gender inequality", in Coy, Maddy (ed.), Prostitution, harm and gender inequality: theory, research and policy, Farnham, Surrey, England Burlington, Vermont: Ashgate, pp. 1–12, ISBN 9781409405450.
  • Coy, Maddy (2012), "'I am a person too': women's accounts and images about body and self in prostitution", in Coy, Maddy (ed.), Prostitution, harm and gender inequality: theory, research and policy, Farnham, Surrey, England Burlington, Vermont: Ashgate, pp. 103–120, ISBN 9781409405450.
  • Coy, Maddy; Kelly, Liz; Horvath, Miranda A.H. (2012), "Troubling notions of male entitlement: men consuming, boasting and confessing about paying for sex", in Coy, Maddy (ed.), Prostitution, harm and gender inequality: theory, research and policy, Farnham, Surrey, England Burlington, Vermont: Ashgate, pp. 121–140, ISBN 9781409405450.
  • Coy, Maddy; Wakeling, Josephine; Garner, Maria (2012), "Selling sex sells: representations of prostitution and the sex industry in sexualised popular culture as symbolic violence", in Coy, Maddy (ed.), Prostitution, harm and gender inequality: theory, research and policy, Farnham, Surrey, England Burlington, Vermont: Ashgate, pp. 181–198, ISBN 9781409405450.
  • Coy, Maddy (2012), "This body which is not mine: the notion of the habit body, prostitution and (dis)embodiment", in Gonzalez-Arnal, Stella; Jagger, Gill; Lennon, Kathleen (eds.), Embodied selves, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 101–118, ISBN 9781137283696.
  • Coy, Maddy (2013), "Children, childhood and sexualised popular culture", in Wild, Jim (ed.), Exploiting childhood: how fast food, material obsession and porn culture are creating new forms of child abuse, London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers, pp. 149–163, ISBN 9780857007421.
  • Coy, Maddy; Thiara, Ravi K. (2014), "'Boys think girls are toys': sexual exploitation and young people", in Ellis, Jane; Thiara, Ravi K. (eds.), Preventing violence against women and girls: educational work with children and young people, Bristol, UK Chicago, Illinois, USA: Policy Press, pp. 181–205, ISBN 9781447307310.
  • Coy, Maddy; Kelly, Liz; Dustin, Holly (2015), "A feminist "epistemic community" reshaping public policy: a case study of the End Violence Against Women Coalition", in Johnson, Holly; Fisher, Bonnie S.; Jaquier, Véronique (eds.), Critical issues on violence against women: international perspectives and promising strategies, London: Routledge, pp. 244–257, ISBN 9781135006037.

Journal articles[edit]

Papers[edit]

For the CWASU[edit]

For EVAW[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Maddy Coy". Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit (CWASU), London Metropolitan University. Retrieved 7 October 2015.
  2. ^ Ellis, Jane; Thiara, Ravi K. (2014), "Notes on contributors", in Ellis, Jane; Thiara, Ravi K. (eds.), Preventing violence against women and girls: educational work with children and young people, Bristol, UK Chicago, Illinois, USA: Policy Press, p. ix, ISBN 9781447307310.

External links[edit]