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Resources for Journalists 2008 - Jan 2010
- Fawcett in the media
- Victory in lap dancing campaign
- Comment on new pay gap figures
- Peers decide on lap dancing changes
- British public supports a legal requirement on employers to conduct pay audits
- Fawcett welcomes the Conservative Party's new commitment to use All Women Shortlists
- Fawcett appoints leading human rights activist as new Chief Executive
- Womens representation in politics must stay on the agenda
- Report finds the sex industry is undermining equality between women and men at work
- Wholesale reform needed to tackle root causes of gender pay gap
- Being a mum has 'devastating' impact on earnings
- Postcode lottery for victims of rape continues
- Fawcett comments on cabinet reshuffle
- Fawcett responds to loss of women in politics
- New Fawcett report published
- Fawcett comments on cabinet reshuffle and appointment of Alan Sugar to Government
- Fawcett responds to loss of four of the most senior women in British politics
- Criminal justice system 'institutionally sexist' finds new report
- Equality campaigners welcome pay audits
- Equality Bill: Pay Audits
- CIPD assertion on women and the recession is misleading, Fawcett says
- Campaign group calls for urgent Government action to counter impact of recession on women
- MPs vote to support lap dancing club licensing reforms
- Victory for campaigners as Government announces reforms to lap dancing club licensing
- Dire news for women as the pay gap widens
- Harriett Harman backs challenge to sex-object culture at work
- Sexism at work 'just below the surface'
Victory in lap dancing campaign
Yesterday the Policing and Crime Bill was passed by both Houses of Parliament - marking the success of the campaign by OBJECT (1) and the Fawcett Society (2) to regulate lap dancing clubs as part of the sex industry, not the leisure industry.
Lap dancing clubs clearly have more in common with sex shops and sex cinemas than they do with a restaurants and bars. Clause 26 (formerly 27) of the Bill will allow local councils to apply more stringent regulations on lap dancing clubs to protect the rights of women in the clubs and to give local people the right to object to a lap dancing club opening in their midst.
Crucially, in the later stages of the Bill, the Government responded to widespread concerns felt across Parliament and backed by several prominent women’s and human rights organisations (3) that the optional nature of the new licensing regime would lead to a postcode lottery. In response to these concerns, a new statutory duty has been introduced requiring Local Authorities to consult locally if they have not adopted the new powers within a year. OBJECT and the Fawcett Society will continue to work with local authorities and local people to ensure that gender equality issues are at the heart of the licensing process and that communities are no longer powerless to resist the spread of commercialised sexism on their high streets.
Ceri Goddard, Chief Executive of the Fawcett Society said, commented on the reforms to lap dancing club licensing:
“Today is a victory for common sense, and is the culmination of an astonishing 18 month campaign by equality campaigners, parliamentarians, local authorities and local residents – all of whom came together to question the unchecked growth of the lap dancing industry – which had doubled in size in just four years.
“Buying a cappuccino is clearly fundamentally different from buying a lap dance from a woman – yet until now the two practices have been licensed in exactly the same way. This legislation recognises that lap dancing clubs are part of the sex industry, and now women’s rights to equality, dignity and safety can be properly considered when licensing lap dancing clubs.”
For further information or to arrange interviews please contact Kat Banyard (Campaigns Officer) on 020 7253 2598 or 07775 855037
Notes to editors
(1) OBJECT is the leading human rights organisation which challenges the sexual objectification of women in the media and popular culture because of its links to discrimination and violence against women. www.object.org.uk
(2) The Fawcett Society is the UK’s leading campaign for women’s rights. www.fawcettsociety.org.uk
(3) The Equality and Human Rights Commission, Equality Now, OBJECT, The Fawcett Society, YWCA, Eaves, Rights of Women, Safe Exit Toynbee Hall, WOMANKIND Worldwide, White Ribbon Campaign, NUS Women’s Campaign.
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