Question

"Selling Sex for Visas: Sex Tourism as a Stepping-stone to International Migration," Denise Brennan
Addressing the myth that sex workers around the globe are simply victims of exploitation and domination, Denise Brennan considers the case of women sex workers in Sosua, Dominican Republic. These women - predominantly poor, single mothers with limited educations - see sex work not as a survival strategy, but as an advancement strategy. They have meager job opportunities and can make more money more quickly selling sex than in any other job available to them. Ultimately many hope to obtain marriage proposals from wealthy sex tourists, and with them visas to places with greater economic opportunities. Brennan sites these strategies as examples of the "savviness and resourcefulness of the so-called powerless."
Marginalized women in marginalized economies:
a. are unable to protect themselves in any way from being passive victims.
b. come up with creative strategies to control their economic lives.
c. are clueless about how to survive, much less advance.
d. usually become very wealthy once they enter the sex trade as long as they are pretty and compliant.

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