1 Taking back the night? Gender and the contestation of sexual entertainment in England and Wales Phil Hubbard 1 and Rachela Colosi 2 1. SSPSSR, University of Kent, Chatham Maritime, Kent, ME4 4AG. Tel: +44(0)1634 888872 Email: P.Hubbard@kent.ac.uk 2. School of Social Sciences, Bridge House, University of Lincoln, Brayford Pool, Lincoln, LN6 7TS, Email: rcolosi@lincoln.ac.uk, Tel: +44(0)1522 837123 ABSTRACT: Despite important moves towards gender equality, it is claimed that the experience of the night-time city remains profoundly different for women and men. The visibility of self-styled ‘gentleman’s clubs’ where female dancers perform for a predominantly male clientele has been taken as prime evidence of this persistent inequity. Opposition to such clubs has hence been vocal, with the result that many local authorities in England and Wales have moved to ban clubs within their jurisdiction utilizing the powers of the Policing and Crime Act, 2009. This paper explores the arguments that have persuaded policy makers to refuse licenses for such venues, particularly the idea that sexual entertainment causes specific harms to women. The paper does not question the veracity of such arguments, but instead explores why sexual entertainment venues have become such an important target of feminist campaigning, situating this opposition in the context of long-standing debates about the sexualisation of the city.