Does Workplace Discrimination Contribute to Sex Work for Trans and Nonbinary Workers?

Author:

Shircliff Jesse Ezra1ORCID,Hutchinson Brook1,Glass Christy1,Suárez Mario1ORCID,Miller Gabe H2ORCID,Marquez-Velarde Guadalupe1

Affiliation:

1. Utah State University , USA

2. University of Alabama at Birmingham , USA

Abstract

Abstract Workplace discrimination contributes to economic precarity for trans individuals, and some evidence suggests that barriers to formal employment may contribute to engagement in sex work. This study examines whether particular types of workplace discrimination – including blocked access to jobs and termination due to trans status – represent a pathway into sex work for trans and nonbinary workers conditional upon social status, gender, and race. Our analysis relies on the 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey (USTS), where we stratify multiple logistic regression models for trans men, trans women, and nonbinary individuals and introduce an interaction term between workplace discrimination and race. We exploit two time horizons in the data for a lifetime analysis and a past-year analysis. We find strong support that trans women and nonbinary individuals are more likely to engage in sex work when they have experienced workplace discrimination compared to trans men. Predicted probabilities show that workplace discrimination amplifies the likelihood of sex work for most trans workers of color compared to those who are white. By contributing to the literature on “bad jobs” and anti-trans workplace bias from an intersectional approach, this study informs debates on anti-discrimination policies and practices that facilitate economic security for trans workers.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Reference79 articles.

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3. “‘Being Talked to Like I Was a Sex Toy, Like Being Transgender Was Simply for the Enjoyment of Someone Else’: Fetishization and Sexualization of Transgender and Nonbinary Individuals”;Anzani,2021

4. “‘I Don’t Think This Is Theoretical; This Is Our Lives’: How Erasure Impacts Health Care for Transgender People.”;Bauer,2009

5. “Normative Discrimination and the Motherhood Penalty.”;Benard,2010

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