Humanitarian Migration Management: migrant young people in the global sex industry
Submitting Institution
London Metropolitan UniversityUnit of Assessment
Area StudiesSummary Impact Type
SocietalResearch Subject Area(s)
Medical and Health Sciences: Public Health and Health Services
Studies In Human Society: Demography, Sociology
Summary of the impact
Professor Nick Mai researched the mobilities and vulnerabilities of young
men, women and transgender people, including minors, working in the sex
industry in the UK, EU and internationally. His findings show that most
young migrants decide to work in the sex industry, which they consider
less exploitative than other sectors. They also show that anti-trafficking
initiatives exacerbate the vulnerability of migrant sex workers by
enforcing restrictive migration policies and the criminalisation of sex
work. Mai's research impacted on public debates, policymaking and
services, which as a result now recognize trafficking as distinct from sex
work and specifically target the needs of migrant sex workers.
Underpinning research
Mai directed five interrelated research projects, which were externally
funded by public and non-governmental bodies at a local, national and
international level including the ESRC, Save the Children, the
International Organisation for Migration, the French region PACA and
Haringey Council. Mai's research spans a variety of emigration and
immigration contexts including the EU, Eastern Europe, North Africa and
Cuba. It addresses jointly men (including traffickers), transgender people
and minors, thus complementing the focus on women that characterises sex
work research. Mai is mostly credited for having discovered that only a
minority of migrants are actually forced to work in the sex industry. This
corresponds to the experience of the main sex work support organisations
in the UK and internationally. In the words of a representative of the UK
Network of Sex Work Projects (UKNSWP), `member projects in London see
thousands of sex workers a year and these findings reflect what they see'.
Mai's research also introduced a more nuanced understanding of the
vulnerabilities implicated in young migrants' involvement in the sex
industry and other irregular economic activities. According to the English
Collective of Prostitutes, a grass-roots organisation of sex workers with
a national network throughout the UK, by providing evidence on `the
complex lives that those of us who are immigrants working in the sex
industry live', Mai's research `gave immigrant sex workers a voice and a
face (...and...) helped people identify sex workers with other workers in
the informal sector and see between various battles to improve
occupational safety'.
Mai's work adopted an innovative methodological combination of
ethnographic observation and semi-structured interviewing, which included
peer researchers and organisations representing the rights of the social
groups being researched. Mai's research shows that by working in the sex
industry and engaging in other irregular economic activities most young
migrants, including minors, are able to achieve socio-economic and
psychological autonomy, which contributes to their resilience and
well-being. It also identifies psychological and socio-economic factors,
such as psychological dependency, the stigmatization of sex work, the lack
of legal migration status and socio-economic marginalization, which
strongly contribute to migrants' vulnerability in social and individual
terms. Mai's finding that anti-trafficking initiatives exacerbate the
vulnerability of migrant sex workers was valued and owned by grass-root
and other sex work support organisations, who underline how policies
should focus on `the under-reporting of violent and other crimes committed
against sex workers' (UKNSWP representative). A representative of the
IUSW, the International Union of Sex Workers, launched and endorsed the
findings of the ESRC project by underlining that `we will only
successfully target trafficking within the sex industry when we make
policy based on evidence and in reality'. According to the director of the
NHS-funded Open Doors project supporting sex workers in East London,
`policy makers have to take into account a well-respected study that
challenges the concepts on which they have built policy, listened to
ideological rhetoric and generally taken an over-simplistic view of the
sex industry'.
References to the research
Mai directed the following Research Grants:
2010-2011 Haringey Council Evaluation of the Services Offered to Migrants
in Haringey & Enfield (Service Agreement Service 10 January 2010) by
SHOC (Sexual Health on Call). £20,000.
2007-2009 `Migrant Workers in the UK Sex Industry Research' funded by the
Economic and Social Research Council (RES-622-26-367). £250,000.
2008 IOM, International Organisation of Migration — Rome HQ. One-year
research project on the `Psycho-Social Profile of Albanians and Romanian
Traffickers'. £20,000.
2005-2007 Save the Children Italy — Rome. Two-year research project on
the relation between child and youth migration, the involvement in illegal
activities and social intervention. £20,000.
2005-2006 PACA French Regional Authority. Two-year project on minors and
young adult male migrants selling sex in the EU. £20,000
Publications
1. Mai, N. (2009) `Between Minor and Errant mobility: the Relation
Between the Psychological Dynamics and the Migration Patterns of Young Men
Selling Sex in the EU', Mobilities, 4(3), pp. 349-366.
2. Mai, N. (2010) `The Politicisation of Migrant Minors:
Italo-Romanian Geopolitics and EU Integration', AREA, 42(2):
182-9.
3. Mai, N. (2011) `Tampering with the Sex of "Angels": Migrant Male
Minors and Young Adults Selling Sex in the EU', Journal of Ethnic and
Migration Studies 37(8): 1237-1252.
4. Mai, N. (2011) `Marginalised (Male) Young Migrants in the EU: Caught
Between the Desire for Autonomy and the Priorities of Social Protection',
in Migrating Alone: Unaccompanied and Separated Children's Migration
to Europe, Paris: UNESCO, pp. 69-90.
5. Mai, N. (2012) `The Fractal Queerness of Non-Heteronormative Migrants
Working in the UK Sex Industry', Sexualities 15(5-6): 570-585.
6. Mai, N. (2013) `Embodied Cosmopolitanisms: the Subjective Mobility of
Migrants Working in the Global Sex Industry, Gender, Place and Culture,
20(1): 107-124.
Details of the impact
The Errant Mobility report was published on the EFUS (European Forum for
Urban Security, an EU-wide network of 300 local and regional authorities)
website and advertised through its listings. The findings officially
informed the documentary `Welcome Europa' (2006), which was produced and
broadcast by the Arte channel and selected at the Sundance Film Festival
(2007). They inform the `Training, Information and Research on
Unaccompanied Minors' policy document produced by the DEVMED
(Mediterranean Development Department) of the PACA regional authority.
According to a representative of Save the Children Italy `the report
became a standard reference for Italian judges, policymakers and project
workers in Italy to understand the intricate relationship between
exploitation and advantage experienced by unaccompanied migrant minors'.
The theoretical and methodological approach and the findings of Mai's
research became the blueprint of the PUCAFREU (Promoting Unprotected
Unaccompanied Children's Access to their Fundamental Rights in the
European Union) EU-funded research project.
The combined findings of the ESRC-funded research, the Haringey Council
evaluation and the IOM-funded project had an important impact on public
debates, policymaking and service provision in the UK. They led to the
implementation of specific language translation and outreach services for
migrant sex workers in London and in the rest of the UK. Haringey Council
used the evaluation results to successfully argue for the need to hire
Romanian and Brazilian Portuguese speaking outreach workers. Mai's
research reinforced ECP's `priority as an organization to focus on
providing rights based information in various languages as well as in
English'. According to a representative of UKNSWP, `project feedback was
that that they had a greater understanding of the experiences of migrants
which could inform their outreach and support service provision to ensure
appropriate services were provided'.
The research informed and shifted public policies and media debates
towards a distinction between migrants' involvement in the sex industry
and trafficking (i.e. see Guardian article by Nick Davies on `Prostitution
and trafficking — the anatomy of a moral panic', 20 October 2009). The ECP
used the research in their campaign against the 2009 Policing and Crime
Act and `the increased criminalization of sex workers and the closures of
premises justified in the name of clamping down on trafficking'. Following
the launch of the research findings, Mai was consulted by the Association
of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) during the preparation of the `Setting the
Record' report, so far the only official police quantification of sex
trafficking in England and Wales, confirming that only a minority of
migrant sex workers are trafficked. The findings were presented at the
ACPO 2010 and at two of the UKNSWP yearly national conferences in 2009 and
2010. The research completed a tradition of participative and ethnographic
research engaging sex workers directly in identifying their needs and
priorities. It has `directly informed policy development at a national
level and informed support service practice across the UK' (UKNSWP
representative) and was pivotal in producing a forceful impact on current
UK government guidelines and strategies on trafficking, which are now
separate from those on prostitution and acknowledge that a minority of
migrants working in the sex industry are trafficked. The findings of the
research inform the influential 2012 report `Silence on Violence' on the
violence experienced by sex workers in London and on the way
anti-trafficking campaigns exacerbated their vulnerability. The report was
authored by a London GLA member, according to whom Mai's research `helps
both quantify and qualify' the `options and choices open to trafficked
people' and provided `invaluable' insight in an area characterised by
`little data'.
Mai's film `Normal' is informed by the combined findings of Mai's
research and was selected at the Raindance International Film Festival
2012. It was screened at several projects and events of the UKNSWP, as
well as at a range of national and international academic, policymaking
and activist settings. The film has been regularly included in syllabi of
teaching modules in Criminology, Gender and Sexuality, Public Health,
Anthropology and Sociology at several UK (Leeds, LSE, LSHTM) and
international (Paris — EHESS, Nijmegen — Radboud) universities and has
impacted on the training of prospective practitioners and policymakers. It
has been seen as helping sex workers to `voice their own experiences of
migrating to the UK' (Open Doors director) and `helping break down
stereotypes' (ECP) while project practitioners have seen it as `an
important resource to inform their partner agencies and the general public
about migrant sex work' (UKNSWP representative).
Sources to corroborate the impact
1. The ESRC research impacted directly on public debates and
policymaking. It informed the parliamentary debates of the Policing and
Crime Bill 2009 and several news items, including: three BBC programmes
(Newsnight, BBC London News and London Politics Show); the Economist's
advertising campaign in Winter 2011; two articles in the Guardian; two
articles in Metro; one article in the Evening Standard, the Hackney
Gazette, the Islington Informer, the Herald Scotland (Glasgow) and the
Telegraph, and over 100 mentions in internet based newspapers and
policymaking websites. They are also mentioned in at least 30 internet
based UK and international newspapers — the list can be made available
on request. In April 2013 Mai was interviewed by Danish TV in the
context of a national debate on the criminalisation of sex work and by
`Information' and other national Danish newspapers. The following is a
selection of the main UK and international media items through which
Mai's research impacted on public debates:
http://www.theguardian.com/uk/2009/oct/20/trafficking-numbers-women-exaggerated
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2009/oct/25/catherine-bennett-prostitution-trafficking
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-15522279
http://www.standard.co.uk/news/majority-of-sex-workers-not-forced-or-trafficked-6362420.html
http://metro.co.uk/2011/10/31/prostitutes-believe-selling-sex-beats-doing-a-menial-job-study-202607/
http://www.spiked-online.com/newsite/article/7625#.UnEVZBZ4G2w
http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/crime-courts/is-there-really-a-sex-trafficking-epidemic.15396708
http://www.information.dk/456280(in
Danish)
http://www.information.dk/457129
(in Danish)
2. Save the Children Italy — on the impact of the Save the Children
research on social interventions targeting unaccompanied migrant minors
and young adults in Rome and in Italy. The report of the research is
published online in Italian on the charity's website:
http://images.savethechildren.it/IT/f/img_pubblicazioni/img38_b.pdf
3. PUCAFREU Project — on the impact of Mai's research on migrant minors
and young people on EU research and social interventions. The adoption
of Mai's theoretical and methodological approach is mentioned on the
project's webpage: http://www.pucafreu.org/index.php/project-description
4. UKNSWP (UK Network of Sex Work Projects). A contact at UKNSWP is
provided, who will be able to explain the impact of the ESRC research
findings and their dissemination (events, academic and non-academic
publications and documentary filmmaking) on public debates, policymaking
and service provision targeting migrant sex workers in the UK.
The research is mentioned and the final report is available on UKNSWP's
website:
http://www.uknswp.org/wp-content/uploads/policyfindingsMigrantsinUKSexIndustroct09.pdf
A written testimony is held at the university and can be provided on
request.
5. NHS — targeted services supporting sex workers. A contact is provided
at the Open Door Project who will be able to comment on the impact of
the ESRC research findings and their dissemination (events, non-academic
publications and documentary filmmaking) on public debates, policymaking
and service provision targeting migrant sex workers in London.
A written testimony is held at the university and can be provided on
request.
6. ECP — English Collective of Prostitutes. A contact at ECP is provided,
who will be able to explain the way the ESRC research findings and their
dissemination (events, non-academic publications and documentary
filmmaking) impacted on grass root support activities addressing migrant
sex workers in the London. The research is mentioned on ECP's website:
http://prostitutescollective.net/2009/11/21/report-and-thank-you-2/
A written testimony is held at the university and can be provided on
request.
7. IUSW (International Union of Sex Workers) — on the impact of the ESRC
research on public debates, policymaking and social interventions
addressing migrant sex workers in the UK. The research is mentioned on
IUSW's website: http://www.iusw.org/2011/10/majority-of-migrant-sex-
workers-not-forced-or-trafficked/
8. GLA (Greater London Assembly). A contact at GLA is provided. This is a
London Assembly Member who will be able to comment on the impact of the
ESRC research findings on public debates, policymaking and social
interventions addressing migrant sex workers in London.
Mai's research is mentioned in the 2012 `Silence on Violence' report by
LAM Andrew Boff
http://glaconservatives.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/downloads/2012/03/Report-on-the-Safety-of-Sex-
Workers-Silence-on-Violence.pdf. It is also mentioned in the 2013
`Shadow City — exposing human trafficking in everyday London' report by
the same author
http://glaconservatives.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/Shadow-City.pdf.
9. Haringey Council. A contact is provided at the Drug & Alcohol
Action Strategy Team, who will be able to explain the impact of the
Haringey evaluation on services targeting migrant sex workers in the
Enfield, Haringey and Barnet. The evaluation is available here: https://metranet.londonmet.ac.uk/research-units/iset/projects/esrc-migrant-workers.cfm
10. X:talk project. The X:talk project is a sex worker-led co-operative
offering English language teaching to fellow sex workers in London
enabling them to work in safer conditions, to organise and to socialise
with each other. Mai's research findings inform X:talk's 2010 `Human
Rights, Sex Work and the Challenge of Trafficking Report', which is
available here:
http://www.xtalkproject.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/reportfinal1.pdf.