Precarious intimacies – Europeanised border regime and migrant sex work |
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Authors: | Niina Vuolajärvi |
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Institution: | Department of Sociology, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ, USA |
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Abstract: | This article examines the meaning of borders – the spaces where immigration policies and restrictions are materially condensed – in the lives of migrant sex workers. I provide a theoretical and conceptual framework to discuss the role of borders in creating living and working conditions for sex workers within the European border regime. This regime both restricts and enables a structural background for migrant sex work. I argue that sex work scholars should pay closer attention to the heterogeneity of non-citizenship and the effects of different immigration statuses on the working conditions and forms of intimacies migrants create. Borders need to be viewed as institutions that produce social relations. I categorise these relations as precarious intimacies to describe the ways in which intimacy, commerce and borders often intertwine in the lives of migrants engaged in commercial sex work. The article draws upon 18-month ethnographic fieldwork among and interviews with migrant sex workers in Finland. |
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Keywords: | Sex work migration precarization intimacy borders |
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