How Laws Regulate Migrant Sex Workers in Canada: To Protect or to Harm?

Auteurs-es

  • Yee Ling Elene Lam McMaster University

Mots-clés :

migrant, immigration, ethnie, racisme, travailleur de l’industrie du sexe, traite, droit, juridique

Résumé

Les travailleurs migrants de l’industrie du sexe au Canada sont réglementés et touchés par un agencement de lois et de politiques aux niveaux fédéral, provincial et municipal. Cet article explique comment ces lois et politiques, qui prétendent protéger les travailleurs migrants, régissent et nuisent à leur vie. En se concentrant sur les expériences des migrants d’origine asiatique, cet article explore comment les lois contre la traite des personnes et leur application mal conçues, confondent le travail du sexe avec la traite des personnes et mettent davantage en danger les travailleurs du sexe migrants. En se penchant sur le droit pénal lié au travail du sexe, les lois sur l’immigration qui ciblent et interdisent le travail du sexe, les lois provinciales sur la traite des personnes et les lois municipales réglementant les services de massage corporel.

Biographie de l'auteur-e

Yee Ling Elene Lam, McMaster University

Elene Lam (LLM, LLB, MSW, BSW) is currently doing her PhD in the School of Social Work at McMaster University. She is studying the harm of anti-trafficking policies. She is the founder and Executive Director of Butterfly (Asian and Migrant Sex Workers Support Network). She has used diverse and innovative approaches to advocate social justice for migrant sex workers, e.g. leadership building and community mobilization. She has been involved in sex worker, racial justice, gender, migrant and labour movements for over 20 years. She has conducted training and presentations to community members, services providers and policy makers on sex work, migration, anti-oppressive practice and human rights in Canada, US, Asia, Europe and Australia. She is a member of the Minister’s Advisory Council on Gender-Based Violence and provides insights and recommendations to the federal government. She was also invited to join the City of Toronto Mayor's Round Table to provide advice on developing policy on anti-asian racism and is on the steering committee of the National Forum on Anti-Asian Racism at the University of British Columbia. She is the recipient of the Constance E. Hamilton Award for Women’s Equality (City of Toronto).

Publié-e

2023-01-11

Comment citer

Lam, Y. L. E. (2023). How Laws Regulate Migrant Sex Workers in Canada: To Protect or to Harm?. Canadian Review of Social Policy Revue Canadienne De Politique Sociale, 82. Consulté à l’adresse https://crsp.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/crsp/article/view/40379

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