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DESCRIPTION:Sex Work, Trafficking and Labor Migration: Views from Inside The Sex 
 Industry\n\nBAYSWAN, Bay Area Sex Worker Advocacy Network, co-sponsors this 
 provocative and educational evening at Artists Television Access at 7 PM on 
 Friday June 5th, offering San Franciscans a rare view of issues for migrant 
 sex workers, outside of the conventional discourse on trafficking.\n\nWhy 
 do some human rights experts say that the US 'sponsors trafficking?' This 
 evening’s presentation explores the contradictions within the 
 anti-trafficking framework and examines sex work migration from an unusual 
 perspective.\n\nIn the 21st century we witness a return to a focus on 
 trafficking and slavery in the context of discussions about commercial sex. 
 Indeed, 'trafficking' functions as a metaphor for prostitution. This 
 evening's presentation includes a number of movies, which offer extremely 
 candid accounts of the experiences and travails of migrant sex workers. 
 This content is rare, including a US Premiere from Taiwan, “To See or Not 
 To See.” \nThese stories do not glamorize, nor condemn sex work. Rather 
 they challenge stereotypes of migrant sex workers from Southeast Asia, 
 widely seen as 'sex slaves.' They present the viewer with a rare 
 understanding of women who travel across borders to work in the sex 
 industry. This program addresses the day to day challenges faced by migrant 
 sex workers, along with the “collateral damage” of anti-trafficking 
 policies (as Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women calls it) with an 
 emphasis on support for those who continue working in these industries in 
 the context of anti-immigrant policies and sex work criminalization. The 
 movie “Happy Endings” explores issues for sex workers from Korea and 
 presents the community activism in Rhode Island as community come out on 
 both sides of the issue.  This issue is particularly timely and disturbing 
 as two weeks ago the Rhode Island House of Representatives passed 
 legislation criminalizing these women, now awaiting passage in the 
 Senate\n\nWe also look into the struggles for sex workers in Cambodia who 
 are faced with a new wave of criminalization through video from Asian 
 Pacific Network of Sex Workers. Viewing these interviews in these movies is 
 a valuable part of human rights education regarding sex work 
 issues.\n\nThis year the San Francisco Sex Worker Festival is honored to 
 share eight short works from the collection of sexworkerspresent, the Asia 
 Pacific Network of Sex Workers, including a number of APNSW works. These 
 powerful productions and collected work provide a valuable library of first 
 person accounts of sex worker's lives and organizing efforts in Asia and 
 around the World.\n\nMore about the movies and event are here, and also 
 pasted below:  http://www.bayswan.org/SexWorkMigration.html\n\nWe recommend 
 that you prepay for tickets to reserve your 
 seat.\nhttp://www.sexworkerfest.com/swfest2009/ATAtickets2009.html\n\nOn 
 Saturday, June 6th,  the Festival presents a full day of videos by and 
 about sex workers at the Roxie Cinema from noon to 2 
 am.\nhttp://www.sexworkerfest.com/swfest2009/RoxieSWFEST2009.html\n\n7 PM 
 June 5th, Friday\nProgram:\nFilms and discussion on\nSex Work, Trafficking 
 and Labor Migration:\nViews from Inside The Sex Industry\nArtists 
 Television Access\n992 Valencia, San Francisco\nCost: $6-$20 (no one turned 
 away for lack of funds)\nInfo: 415-287-31114\nswfest@bayswan.org\n\n\nThe 
 Movies:\n7 PM   Anti-trafficking: Cambodia, the Reality\nProduced by APNSW 
 (Asia Pacific Network of Sex Workers)\nFirst-person stories of the effect 
 and human cost of US backed anti-trafficking laws on Cambodian sex workers, 
 including accounts of a sex worker's stay in a notorious "reeducation camp" 
 prison. (Thailand, 4:43 min. - 2008)\n\nMTV and the Trafficking Law in 
 Cambodia\nProduced by No Exit News\nMTV and U.S. AID want to save Cambodian 
 women from sex work, but some very irate Cambodian women think MTV forgot 
 to have a conversation or two along the way... A heartfelt response by sex 
 workers in Cambodia to the MTV Exit Campaign against trafficking and 
 exploitation. (Cambodia, 9 min-2008)\n\n7: 15 PM    To See or Not To 
 See\nDirector: Tsai Yi-Feng\n(US Premiere screening) tells the fascinating 
 story of immigrant sex workers from Mainland China in Taiwan. Director Tsai 
 Yi-Feng rides in the backseat with a driver for the sex workers, and 
 follows the women from their recruitment in Chengdu, Sichuan, to their 
 workplace in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. As immigrants, the women in this video 
 might be stereotyped as 'trafficking victims,' but the movie documents the 
 real lives, perceptions and difficult choices for these women. This movie 
 is a must see for all those who suspect that behind the sensationalistic 
 trafficking headlines, there is a deeper and more complex story about the 
 struggles of sex work immigrants and the choices women make. (Taiwan, 64 
 min.-2003)\n    Screenings/Awards\n    2004 Taiwan International 
 Documentary Festival-Nominated for Image Taiwan Award\n    2003 WuShanTou 
 Film Festival - Opening Film, Taiwan\n    2004 Taipei Film Festival - 
 Jury's Special Prize\n\n8:15 PM    Happy Endings\n Director/Producer: Tara 
 Hurley; Editor: Nick Marcoux; Sound Design: Timothy O'Keefe\n    This 
 guerilla style documentary follows the life of "Heather" over three years 
 as she works in a massage parlor, while the Rhode Island legislators debate 
 over what they have strategically called a "loophole" which that allows 
 prostitution behind closed doors. The movie features interviews from 
 massage parlor workers in Rhode Island as they are confronted with the 
 racism and xenophobia of local anti-prostitution activists. This film also 
 features interviews with many Rhode Island's movers and shakers including 
 Providence Mayor David Cicillin Steve Brown of the ACLU and 
 anti-prostitution zealot, Donna Hughes.(US, 80 min- 2008)\n\n\n9:30 
 Discussion\n\n\nSuggested Reading:\n\n    The following materials provide 
 some background on rights-based approaches to trafficking.\n\nSeveral 
 reviews of Laura María Agustín's, Sex at the Margins: Migration, Labour 
 Markets and the Rescue Industry, include interviews and additional material 
 about this issue. Spiked, The New Statesman, and Reason.\n\nGlobal Alliance 
 Against Traffick in Women's 'Collateral Damage' reviews the impact of 
 anti-trafficking measures on human rights in 8 countries. This anthology 
 emphasizes the critical need for a re-assessment of anti-trafficking 
 initiatives around the globe in order that human rights do not get written 
 off as 'collateral damage' in combating human trafficking.\n\nFor more 
 about this discussion, visit: http://www.bayswan.org/traffick/\n\n\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/06/03/18600290.php
SUMMARY:Sex Work, Trafficking and Labor Migration: Views from Inside The Sex Industry
LOCATION:Artists Television Access\n992 Valencia\nSan Francisco, CA
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/06/03/18600290.php
DTSTART:20090606T020000Z
DTEND:20090606T050000Z
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