Abstract

The growing concern over the influx of foreign women in Malaysia as sex workers, has continually gained the attention of the local media particularly the mainstream newspapers. The media, despite playing an instrumental role in bringing about social transformation, has the ability to portray the foreign women in a positive way or to discriminate against them. This study, based on qualitative analysis, represents an attempt to study a social problem particularly in the way that foreign women in sex work have been represented in Malaysia by the mainstream English-language newspapers. The analytical tools of the discourse-historical approach (DHA) are employed in the analysis of the news articles. In particular, the argumentation strategy in the DHA demonstrates that a number of topoi (i.e., the topoi of control, number, threat, and victimisation) have been employed to represent foreign sex workers in the media. Investigation of the newspaper extracts from New Straits Times and The Star generally revealed that the media have portrayed foreign women in sex work in the offender orientation frame more so than as victims. Furthermore, foreign sex workers are also positioned negatively because of their illegal migrant status, making them doubly discriminated against. Such representations directly impact the women’s lives, leading to further discrimination on the basis of their trade and illegal migrant status, denying them a voice and depriving them of their legal rights. The paper concludes by discussing the contributions of the research and emphasises the need for social justice for these marginalised women.

Highlights

  • Trends in migration flows in the Southeast Asia region have evolved over the years, and one aspect of this migration has been the movement across borders of women in the sex work industry

  • The findings revealed that foreign sex workers were represented in The Star and New Straits Times through several types of topoi

  • The argumentation strategy employed in the discourse-historical approach (DHA) can provide a useful framework for analysing the discourse about sex work

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Trends in migration flows in the Southeast Asia region have evolved over the years, and one aspect of this migration has been the movement across borders of women in the sex work industry. “This movement has expanded rapidly over the last two decades and shows no indication of slowing down” The involvement of migrant women in sex work is a significant aspect of non-permanent or temporary migration. It is not easy to access the extent of the sex trade because it operates illegally and is often underground. According to Lim (1998), sex workers do not generally involve in the trade in their home country. Young women are brought to cities with initial promises of better forms of employment but lured into the sex industry (Edgell, Gottfried, & Granter, 2015). According to Ramayal (2013), many women from Indonesia, China, Sri Lanka, and the Philippines have been trafficked and exploited as sexual commodities

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call