Newcastle Escorts

Find beautiful and experienced Newcastle escorts. These gorgeous available escorts in Shropshire are waiting your call. Don't waste your time, book your adult entertainment now and enjoy yourself.

Newcastle Area Description

Escorts in Newcastle, Shropshire - Select An Escort

On Select An Escort, we list hundreds of experienced Newcastle escorts of all types, sizes, ethnicities, sexualities, services and personalities. It can be a mine field looking for the partner to suit you. We aim to make it easy for you to select a compatible companion. Using the menu immediately above the first Newcastle lady listed, you can refine your search. You can select the employment status of the courtesan. Is she self-employed, or is she represented by a third party, an agency? You may want to change the search area or look for specific type of call girls. You could be looking by age, colour, height or one of many other physical attributes of the ladies on display. You can search for busty escorts, or you can look for a service which might be provided.

Once you have narrowed down the search of likely Newcastle escorts, you can now begin to look at their individual escort profiles. Each profile will contain the Newcastle models description, rates, services and contact details. From the profiles you can swipe through your shortlist of companions looking for the one you would want to spend time and money with.

The types of Newcastle escorts to search for

Newcastle BBW - These are the larger woman, generally with a dress size of 16 and larger

Newcastle Mature - An older escort. Mature means different ages to different clients. I presume the older the client is, the older the lady is to be mature.

Newcastle Ebony - A black lady.

Newcastle Models - A model refers to a girl who has a model figure, complexion and hair. She will be slim tall and beautiful. She will generally comand a high fee.

Newcastle Teen - A younger escort who is 18 to 21 years old.

Newcastle Sex Work News

The battle lines are being drawn. In Scotland, England and Wales are we going down the discredited line of the Nordic model. The proposed legislation is coming to both parliaments. In this article from Care, they talk about evidence. Evidence that the Nordic model and the criminalisation of the sex industry is dangerous is proven beyond all doubt, Even the recent Home Office research done by a group in Bristol University comes down on the side that the current laws are not fit, and the Nordic model is a failure.  Evidence of Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland show sex workers are in greater danger.  Why is the evidence from New Zealand, and New South Wales always disregarded?  Even unintended legislation that decriminalised the Sex Industry in Rhode Island showed that decriminalisation is a better way to go. Against all this evidence, we have CARE and other organisations campaigning for the Nordic model which will do nothing to help sex workers. If you are a sex worker or an ally, then it is time to communicate with your MP, otherwise, you will find your advertising streams closed, your clients more secretive and unlikely to divulge any personal information. Are you looking to go back to the street to get clients, this happened in the US after the SESTA/FESTA legislation was enacted. 

Here is a small part of the CARE article, please read the whole article from the link.

We must explore options to criminalise the purchase of sex, sending the message that exploitation will not be tolerated.

Do we want to live in a society where you can buy sexual consent? That was the question posed two years ago in a ground-breaking report from the Conservative Human Rights Commission. It recommended that buying sex should be criminalised and people in prostitution supported through clear exit pathways and strategies. Now, two years on, are we any further forward?

The fact is, a debate about current prostitution laws is long overdue. When I say debate, I mean a proper, evidence-led, robust discussion about the type of society we want to be. Prostitution is a divisive issue, with strong feelings either side of the debate. But all campaigners agree that the current law is not working. 

Paying for sex and providing sexual services for payment are legal in England, Wales, and Scotland. Someone can sell their body for the purposes of sex and someone else can legally buy it. However, other activities closely related to prostitution are against the law – soliciting in a public place, brothel keeping and controlling others for prostitution. This confusing legal framework is unsustainable and morally indefensible. The deficiencies are summed up by the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Prostitution, who, in their 2014 report wrote:

“The legal settlement around prostitution sends no clear signals to women who sell sex, men who purchase it, courts and the criminal justice system, the police or local authorities. In practice, those who sell sexual services carry the burden of criminality despite being those who are most vulnerable to coercion and violence. This serves to normalise the purchase and stigmatise the sale of sexual services - and undermines efforts to minimise entry into and promote exit from prostitution.”