ABSTRACT

Based on in-depth ethnographic work, this book presents a study of Filipinas trafficked to South Korea, focusing on women who entered South Korea as migrant entertainers and subsequently became deployed in exploitative work environments around US military bases there. It contributes to the extension of our knowledge about human trafficking in the Asian region through an exploration of the experiences of more than 100 women who took part in the study. The book challenges many of the accepted understandings about "trafficking victims" and unravels the implications of these narrow understandings for the women themselves. It explores the ways women negotiate trafficking largely outside of the emerging formal anti-trafficking framework, and explains how new community formations and social networks emerge crafted by the women themselves to manage and overcome their vulnerabilities in migration.

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|30 pages

Re-thinking trafficking in gijich'on

chapter 4|19 pages

Health in trafficking

chapter 5|20 pages

Romancing (in) the club

chapter 6|23 pages

Running to the future

chapter 7|18 pages

Anti-trafficking by NGOs and entertainers

chapter 8|14 pages

Home is where the hurt is

chapter 9|3 pages

Conclusion