
Cosmopolitan Sex Workers is a groundbreaking look into the phenomenon of non-trafficked women who migrate from one global city to another to perform paid sexual labor in Southeast Asia. Through a new, innovative framework, Christine B.N. Chin shows that as neoliberal economic restructuring processes create pathways connecting major cities throughout the world, competition and collaboration between cities creates new avenues for the movement of people, services and goods. Loosely organized networks of migrant labor grow in tandem with professional-managerial classes, and sex workers migrate to different parts of cities, depending on the location of the clientele to which they cater.But while global cities create economic opportunities for migrants (and depend on the labor they provide), states react with new forms of securitization and surveillance. As a result, migrants must negotiate between appropriating and subverting the ideas that inform global economic restructuring. Chin argues that migration allows women to develop intercultural skills that help them to make these negotiations.Cosmopolitan Sex Workers is innovative not only in its focus on non-trafficked women, but in its analysis of the complex relationship between global economic processes and migration for sex work. Through fascinating interviews with sex workers in Kuala Lumpur, Chin shows that sex work can provide women with the means of earning income for families, for education, and even for their own businesses. It also allows women the means to travel the world - a form of cosmopolitanism "from below."
How does the intersection of neoliberal economic restructuring and global city development shape the migration patterns and labor experiences of non-trafficked sex workers? Christine B.N. Chin, a scholar in gender and international relations, utilizes ethnographic research and interviews conducted in Kuala Lumpur to examine the agency of migrant women. She argues that these workers navigate complex state surveillance and economic pressures by developing intercultural skills, effectively utilizing migration as a strategy for financial autonomy and personal mobility within a globalized framework.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of migration and gender studies frequently cite this work for its focus on the agency of migrant women rather than viewing them solely as victims of global systems. Experts note that the text provides a nuanced perspective on the relationship between urban economic development and the informal labor sector.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2015-03-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190249269
ISBN-13:
9780190249267
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