Geographic racializing and the (re)colonization of Vancouver during the sex work “crisis”
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.25071/f89gfa57Références
Anderson, K. J. (1991). Vancouver’s Chinatown: Racial discourse in Canada, 1875 – 1980. McGill-Queen’s University Press.
Carter, S. (1993). Categories and terrains of exclusion: Constructing the “Indian woman” in the early settlement era in Western Canada. Great Plains Quarterly, 13(3), 147 – 161. https://www.jstor.org/stable/23531720
City of Vancouver. (2001). A newcomer’s guide to the city of Vancouver. City Publications Collections (Box 150-B-03, File 20), City of Vancouver Archives.
Hunt, S. (2013). Decolonizing sex work: Developing an intersectional Indigenous approach. In E. van der Meulen, E. M. Durisin, & V. Love (Eds.), Selling sex: Experience, advocacy, and research on sex work in Canada (pp. 82 – 100). UBC Press.
Perry, A. (2001). On the edge of empire: Gender, race, and the making of British Columbia, 1849 – 1871. University of Toronto Press.
Ross, B. L. (2012). Outdoor brothel culture: The un/making of a transsexual stroll in Vancouver’s West End, 1975 – 1984. Journal of Historical Sociology, 25(1), 126 – 150.
Ross, B. L. (2018). Whorganizers and gay activists: Histories of convergence, contemporary currents of divergence, and the promise of non-normative futures. In E. M. Durisin, E. van der Meulen, & C. Bruchert (Eds.), Red light labour: Sex work regulation, agency, and resistance (pp. 256 – 271). UBC Press.
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