Weaponized Licensure: Asian Migrant Sex Workers’ Struggle Against Discriminatory Licensing in Newmarket, Ontario

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Weaponized Licensure: Asian Migrant Sex Workers’ Struggle Against Discriminatory Licensing in Newmarket, Ontario
Abstract
This article delves into the recent efforts of Asian migrant massage and sex workers in the Town of Newmarket, Ontario, and their struggle against a recently amended Personal Wellness Establishments (PWE) By-law. It starts with a historical overview of municipal licensing schemes and legislated migration controls in Canada, used to justify increased surveillance, control movement, and deny Asian women entry into Canada, before illustrating the enduring impacts on Asian migrant workers today. It concludes by emphasizing that migrant sex workers, often depicted as voiceless and nonconsenting victims, take leadership and have agency in defining their own struggles and authoring possibilities to resist.
Publication
Journal of Critical Race Inquiry
Volume
11
Issue
2
Pages
24-39
Date
2024-12-11
Language
en
ISSN
1925-3850
Short Title
Weaponized Licensure
Accessed
12/16/24, 2:10 AM
Library Catalog
jcri.ca
Rights
Copyright (c) 2024 Elene Lam, Vincent Wan Shun Wong, Sandra Ka Hon Chu, Tsz Ching Chan, Amanda De Lisio
Extra
Number: 2
Citation
Lam, E., Wong, V. W. S., Chu, S. K. H., Chan, T. C., & Lisio, A. D. (2024). Weaponized Licensure: Asian Migrant Sex Workers’ Struggle Against Discriminatory Licensing in Newmarket, Ontario. Journal of Critical Race Inquiry, 11(2), 24–39. https://doi.org/10.24908/jcri.v11i2.17782
Author / Editor