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Social Policy 3.7

Migrant sex workers in Denmark labor twice as long as nationals

A Danish study analyzing 2,600 online sex work advertisements found migrant workers advertise nearly double the hours of Danish nationals—and are far more likely to claim 24/7 availability. The finding reveals how immigration status creates economic desperation that exploits vulnerable workers, with implications for labor enforcement and trafficking prevention across Europe.

Originaltitel: SexWork.DK: a comparative study of citizenship and working hours among sex workers in Denmark

Abstrakt

<p>Sex workers in Europe are increasingly of nonnational origin. The Schengen cooperation allows internal migration within the European Union, but many migrant sex workers originate from outside the EU. While sex workers are already in precarious positions, nonnationals risk deportation, dependent on their citizenship status, and may have debts to smugglers. Consequently, they may be more likely to work longer hours to increase short-term profits. Using a dataset of sex work advertisements from one Danish website (n = 2,594), we estimate the association between inferred citizenship status and a) advertised hours on shift using ordinary least squares regression, and b) the probability of advertising 24/7 availability using a linear probability model. Compared to Danish sex workers, we find migrants advertise almost twice as many hours on shift and are more likely to advertise 24/7 availability. These results shed light on the inequalities that persist between national and nonnational sex workers.</p>

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