The global migration network of sex-workers
Luis E C Rocha, Petter Holme, Claudio D G Linhares

TL;DR
This study maps the global migration network of sex-workers using online advertisement data, revealing unique structural patterns, economic influences, and migration dynamics distinct from general population trends.
Contribution
It introduces a novel network-based approach to analyze international sex-worker migration patterns using online data sources, highlighting economic and geographic factors influencing migration.
Findings
European countries form a strong migration core with mutual exchanges.
Migration is influenced by GDP per capita, affecting country attractiveness.
Median financial gain from migration is 15.9%, decreasing with origin country's GDPc.
Abstract
Differences in the social and economic environment across countries encourage humans to migrate in search of better living conditions, including job opportunities, higher salaries, security and welfare. Quantifying global migration is, however, challenging because of poor recording, privacy issues and residence status. This is particularly critical for some classes of migrants involved in stigmatised, unregulated or illegal activities. Escorting services or high-end prostitution are well-paid activities that attract workers all around the world. In this paper, we study international migration patterns of sex-workers by using network methods. Using an extensive international online advertisement directory of escorting services and information about individual escorts, we reconstruct a migrant flow network where nodes represent either origin or destination countries. The links represent…
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