| Question 1: In Netherlands, prostitution is legal, regulated, accepted by society and very common (in 2003 it was estimated that in ________, one woman in 35 was working as a prostitute, compared to one in 300 in London[5]). | |||
|
|
| Question 2: Moral opposition (and legal prohibition) of prostitution come from two different sides: conservative and religious values associated with right wing politics and feminist values associated with ________. | |||
|
|
| Question 3: Prostitution outside these brothels is illegal throughout the state; prostitution is illegal in the major metropolitan areas (Las Vegas, Reno, and ________). | |||
|
|
| Question 4: For these reasons, some African countries have also become destinations for ________. | |||
|
|
| Question 5: [2] Social breakdown and poverty caused by ________ in several African countries has caused further increases in the rate of prostitution in those countries. | |||
|
|
| Question 6: Prostitution is illegal in most of the ex-communist countries of ________. | |||
|
|
| Question 7: Infection rates of up to 33% were observed in this group in the late 1980s in Uganda, ________ and Tanzania. | |||
|
|
| Question 8: Past surveys indicate that 30 to 35 percent of all prostitutes in the Mekong sub-region of ________ are between 12 and 17 years of age. | |||
|
|
| Question 9: ________ is the only US state which allows some legal prostitution in some of its counties. | |||
|
|
| Question 10: For example, in ________ prostitution is illegal,[3] but in practice it is tolerated and regulated, and the country is a destination for sex tourism. | |||
|
|
|
|