𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

📁

Illicit Flirtations: Labor, Migration, and Sex Trafficking in Tokyo

✍ Scribed by Rhacel Parreñas


Publisher
Stanford University Press
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Leaves
337
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


In 2004, the U.S. State Department declared Filipina hostesses in Japan the largest group of sex trafficked persons in the world. Since receiving this global attention, the number of hostesses entering Japan has dropped by nearly 90 percent—from more than 80,000 in 2004 to just over 8,000 today. To some, this might suggest a victory for the global anti-trafficking campaign, but Rhacel Parreñas counters that this drastic decline—which stripped thousands of migrants of their livelihoods—is in truth a setback. Parreñas worked alongside hostesses in a working-class club in Tokyo's red-light district, serving drinks, singing karaoke, and entertaining her customers, including members of the yakuza, the Japanese crime syndicate. While the common assumption has been that these hostess bars are hotbeds of sexual trafficking, Parreñas quickly discovered a different world of working migrant women, there by choice, and, most importantly, where none were coerced into prostitution. But this is not to say that the hostesses were not vulnerable in other ways. Illicit Flirtations challenges our understandings of human trafficking and calls into question the U.S. policy to broadly label these women as sex trafficked. It highlights how in imposing top-down legal constraints to solve the perceived problems—including laws that push dependence on migrant brokers, guest worker policies that bind migrants to an employer, marriage laws that limit the integration of migrants, and measures that criminalize undocumented migrants—many women become more vulnerable to exploitation, not less. It is not the jobs themselves, but the regulation that makes migrants susceptible to trafficking. If we are to end the exploitation of people, we first need to understand the actual experiences of migrants, not rest on global policy statements. This book gives a long overdue look into the real world of those labeled as trafficked.

✦ Table of Contents


Contents
Introduction: The Indentured Mobility of Migrant Hostesses
1. The Migration of Entertainers to Japan
2. The Labor System in Hostess Clubs
3. Buttressing Masculinity
4. The Risky Business of Love
5. Cultures of Flirtation
6. Making Love for a Visa
7. The Invisibility of Hostesses
8. The Segregation of Hostesses
Conclusion: Ensuring the Safe Passage of Migrant Hostesses
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Illicit Flirtations: Labor, Migration, a
✍ Rhacel Parreñas 📂 Library 📅 2011 🏛 Stanford University Press 🌐 English

<p>Working alongside migrant Filipina hostesses in Japan, Parreñas investigates the impact of being labeled as trafficked victims and explores what governments should do to improve the lives of global migrants.</p>

Gridlock: Labor, Migration, and Human Tr
✍ Pardis Mahdavi 📂 Library 📅 2011 🏛 Stanford University Press 🌐 English

The images of human trafficking are all too often reduced to media tales of helpless young women taken by heavily accented, dark-skinned captors—but the reality is a far cry from this stereotype. In the Middle East, Dubai has been accused of being a hotbed of trafficking. Pardis Mahdavi, however, dr

Gridlock: Labor, Migration, and Human Tr
✍ Pardis Mahdavi 📂 Library 📅 2011 🏛 Stanford University Press 🌐 English

<p><i>Gridlock</i> explores how migrant workers' actual experiences in Dubai contrast with the typical discussions—and global moral panic—about human trafficking.</p>

Migration, Agency and Citizenship in Sex
✍ Rutvica Andrijasevic 📂 Library 📅 2010 🏛 Palgrave Macmillan 🌐 English

Providing a new perspective on migration and sex work in Europe, this book is based on interviews with migrant women in the sex sector. It brings together issues of migration, labour and political subjectivity in order to refocus scholarly and policy agenda away from sex slavery and organized crime,