
Toshiko Tsujimoto
Ritsumeikan University, Kyoto, Japan
Keywords: Prostitution and human trafficking, Filipino female entertainers in South Korea, unsynchronized migration policies, power asymmetry between sending and host states, structural coercion, the state and private alignment
DOI: 10.5509-2025982-art1
This empirical study explores the reasons Filipino female entertainers trafficked to South Korea cannot seek justice as victims in Korea. To answer this question, the article considers the cause of trafficking to be the structural coercion embedded in unsynchronized migration policies in the Philippines and Korea. By examining the discrepant views and power asymmetry of these two countries, I show how they have led to the development of unsynchronized migration policies that result in knowledge gaps in the processes of recruiting and transporting migrants. These gaps allow the conflation of legal and illegal operations and the alignment of government officials and private agents. Consequently, women are deceived into engaging in prostitution in Korea through nonconsensual illegal exits from the Philippines coordinated by corrupt immigration officers and illegal brokers. This article also argues that unsynchronized migration policies lead to systemic coercion, in which the deception, intimidation, and forced migration of women by private entities align with state laws and regulations. This creates path-dependent journeys that affect women’s after-migration situations. The cycle of deception, intimidation, exploitation, and deportation of women has deprived them of exit options from abusive scenarios and from the right to seek justice in Korea, discharging the Korean government of its responsibility to the victims of trafficking. The study pushes the debates on prostitution and trafficking into considering the coalescence of state, legal, and private entities in transnational migration, revealing how state violence against women is hidden behind the concept of victim consent and the malicious conduct of business entities.
阻碍诉诸司法的权利: 结构性胁迫和韩国菲律宾女艺人的贩卖
关键词: 卖淫和人口贩卖、韩国菲律宾女艺人、不同步的移民政策、输出国和接收国之间的权力不对称、结构性胁迫、国家和私人结盟
本实证研究探讨了被贩卖到韩国的菲律宾女艺人无法在韩国寻求正义的原因。为了回答这个问题,本文认为人口贩运的原因是内在于菲律宾和韩国移民政策不同步的结构性胁迫。通过研究这两个国家不同的观点和权力不对称,我展示了它们如何导致移民政策的发展不同步,从而导致招募和运送移民过程中的知识差距。这些差距使得合法和非法运作混为一谈,政府官员和私人代理人结盟。因此,在腐败移民官员和非法经纪人的协调下,并未经双方同意,女性非法离开菲律宾,被欺骗在韩国从事卖淫活动。本文还认为,不同步的移民政策导致了系统性的胁迫,其中私人实体对女性的欺骗、恐吓和强迫移民与国家法律法规相一致。这造成了女性的路径依赖性的旅程,影响她们移民后的状况。对女性欺骗、恐吓、剥削和驱逐处境的循环剥夺了她们逃离虐待境地的选择,也剥夺了她们在韩国寻求正义的权利,使韩国政府免除了对人口贩运受害者的责任。这项研究将关于卖淫和人口贩运的辩论推向对国家、法律和私人实体在跨国移民中的联合的考量,揭示了国家对妇女的暴力行为如何隐藏在受害者同意的概念和商业实体的恶意行为背后。