The “Fake Marriage” Test in Taiwan: Gender, Sexuality, and Border Control

Mei-Hua Chen
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

According to many reports, migrant sex workers often use marriages of convenience to cross national borders in order to avoid laws criminalizing commercial sex in many destination countries. Taiwan is one of the countries developing strategies to prevent this illicit migration, particularly through the application of a fake marriage test. Based on in-depth interviews with eighteen Chinese migrant sex workers and thirteen officers of Taiwan’s National Immigration Agency (NIA), this article argues, first, that the discourse of “national security” has been widely drawn on to justify Taiwan’s rigid border control at the expense of stigmatized Chinese prostitutes who have been scapegoated. Border control is therefore not only racialized or classed but also sexualized, to the extent that all Chinese migrant women are considered potential prostitutes. Second, this article reveals how the exclusion of and hostility toward Chinese sex workers are simultaneously linked with a gender regime that seeks to exclude Chinese spouses who deviate from Taiwanese gender and social norms. The border is therefore a contested site where gender, sexuality, and nationality are interwoven.
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台湾的“假婚姻”测试:性别、性行为与边境管制
根据许多报告,移徙性工作者经常利用便利婚姻跨越国界,以逃避许多目的地国家将商业性行为定为犯罪的法律。台湾是制定防止这种非法移民的战略的国家之一,特别是通过应用假结婚测试。本文基于对18名中国大陆移徙性工作者和13名台湾国家移民局官员的深度访谈,认为首先,“国家安全”的话语被广泛地用来为台湾严格的边境管制辩护,而牺牲了被污名化的中国大陆妓女作为替罪羊。因此,边境管制不仅是种族化或阶级化的,而且是性化的,以至于所有的中国移民妇女都被认为是潜在的妓女。其次,这篇文章揭示了对中国性工作者的排斥和敌意是如何同时与性别制度联系在一起的,这种制度试图排除偏离台湾性别和社会规范的中国配偶。因此,边界是一个有争议的地点,性别、性取向和国籍交织在一起。
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