This article discusses how the Western imaginary that the market and intimacy are separate and hostile spheres affects some women’s migratory projects in Italy. It traces the place and meaning of this trope within contemporary feminist and sex workers rights’ activists debates on prostitution. Drawing from ethnographic research, it shows how migrant women prevail in and navigate jobs that transgress this normative separation–care and sex work–resulting in their positioning as ‘intimate Others’ or ‘risky tenants’. It argues that addressing women’s predicaments requires tackling the intersecting structures of inequality moulding the conditions under which they perform and exchange labour
Paid reproductive work, especially in the case of cleaning and home-care for elderly people, is an i...
The phenomenon of commercial sex has gone, during the past two decades, through significant changes ...
Migrant women workers employed in what are seen as ‘low-skilled’ labour sectors are disadvantaged by...
This article discusses how the Western imaginary that the market and intimacy are separate and hosti...
Since the late 1980s an increasing number of migrant women originating primarily from economically d...
This article offers a critical exploration of exclusionary practices enacted in Italy towards migran...
In the last decade, the field of sex work and anti-trafficking in Europe has been the object of rene...
During the past twenty years, the entrance, on a large scale, of migrant women in the various circui...
Since the mid-1980s, sexual services (like other forms of affective and care labour) in Italy are in...
Focusing on Italy, this book discusses how women negotiate sexuality and social status in a Western ...
InWestern Europe, migrant women are very often employed in the area of domestic/care work. In Italy...
In this article I begin with an overview of migration theory as it relates to those selling sex, inc...
What often seems to be neglected in the public sphere is the diversity of experiences pertaining to ...
Although the EU made significant efforts in fighting against human trafficking, the identified vict...
This article explores the racialisation of women’s sexuality in contemporary Italy at the intersecti...
Paid reproductive work, especially in the case of cleaning and home-care for elderly people, is an i...
The phenomenon of commercial sex has gone, during the past two decades, through significant changes ...
Migrant women workers employed in what are seen as ‘low-skilled’ labour sectors are disadvantaged by...
This article discusses how the Western imaginary that the market and intimacy are separate and hosti...
Since the late 1980s an increasing number of migrant women originating primarily from economically d...
This article offers a critical exploration of exclusionary practices enacted in Italy towards migran...
In the last decade, the field of sex work and anti-trafficking in Europe has been the object of rene...
During the past twenty years, the entrance, on a large scale, of migrant women in the various circui...
Since the mid-1980s, sexual services (like other forms of affective and care labour) in Italy are in...
Focusing on Italy, this book discusses how women negotiate sexuality and social status in a Western ...
InWestern Europe, migrant women are very often employed in the area of domestic/care work. In Italy...
In this article I begin with an overview of migration theory as it relates to those selling sex, inc...
What often seems to be neglected in the public sphere is the diversity of experiences pertaining to ...
Although the EU made significant efforts in fighting against human trafficking, the identified vict...
This article explores the racialisation of women’s sexuality in contemporary Italy at the intersecti...
Paid reproductive work, especially in the case of cleaning and home-care for elderly people, is an i...
The phenomenon of commercial sex has gone, during the past two decades, through significant changes ...
Migrant women workers employed in what are seen as ‘low-skilled’ labour sectors are disadvantaged by...