Migrant Workers in the UK Sex Industry

Contrary to popular perceptions, only a minority of migrant sex workers in the UK feel they were trafficked into the sex industry, according to a recent study led by Dr. Nick Mai of the Institute for the Study of European Transformations (ISET) at London Metropolitan University.

A copy of the press release about the study, ‘Migrant Workers in the UK Sex Industry’, can be found below.  You can also read the final policy-relevant report here.

Dr. Mai’s study provides further evidence that the rush toward increased criminalization of the UK sex industries is misguided. Last week the Guardian reported:

“The UK’s biggest ever investigation of sex trafficking failed to find a single person who had forced anybody into prostitution in spite of hundreds of raids on sex workers in a six-month campaign by government departments, specialist agencies and every police force in the country.”

Ooops.
In a response to the Guardian report, Elizabeth Pisani concludes:

“The policing and crime bill is bad for people who want to sell sex, and it’s bad for people who are forced to sell sex against their will too. By conflating the dramatic and often tragic stories of the second group with the often rather dreary, workaday realities of the first, the government does a disservice to both.”

Despite that sex workers have been saying the exact same thing for years, here are the findings of Dr. Mai’s study that will be taken much more seriously:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Only a minority of migrant sex workers are trafficked!

New evidence released today (28 October 2009) by the ESRC-funded research ‘Migrant Workers in the UK Sex Industry’ by Dr Nick Mai of the Institute for the Study of European Transformations (ISET) at London Metropolitan University shows that, contrary to popular perceptions, only a minority of interviewees felt they had been trafficked into the UK sex industry.

This policy-relevant and evidence-based research draws on the life experiences of100 migrant women, men and transgender people working in all the main jobs available in the sex industry in central London.

Dr Nick Mai from ISET said: ’Very few of the migrants we interviewed felt they were forced to work in the UK sex industry. On the contrary, the majority consciously decided to work in the sex industry as a way to improve theirs and their families’ lives.’

The new Policing and Crime Bill under discussion in the Houses of Lords would make it illegal to buy sex and easier to close down commercial sex premises, as a way to stamp out trafficking and sexual exploitation.

The research findings raise concerns that the government is going down the wrong path and that the proposed legislation on sex trafficking could leave the sex workers it is trying to protect even more vulnerable.

‘Most interviewees thought that these provisions would merely push the sex industryfurther underground and that they would be less safe as a result,’ said Dr Nick Mai.

Dr Mai concluded: ‘The findings of this research go against the grain of the idea that the majority of migrants working in the sex industry are exploited or trafficked and that further criminalisation of the sex industry, including clients, or restrictive migration and licensing measures are the best ways to fight cases of violence and abuse. Rather, measures towards the decriminalisation of the sex industry and the regularisation of its migrant workers are the best ways to decrease their potential vulnerability to exploitation in the sex industry as in any other sector they might choose to work in’.

 

This post first appeared at Ickaprick & Ironpussy and was cross-posted here by the original author.

 


Nico Little

Nico Little is an Anglo-Albertan who decamped to Montreal sometime in the late nineties “to learn French and be gay.” He then moved to Ottawa, Ontario, where he worked as an HIV outreach...