Laldinpuii Rutha, Shlok Goenka
This
paper examines why female university students aged 18–21 from northeast India
enter Delhi’s informal erotic economy—massage parlours, escort platforms,
brothels—at rates structurally unmatched by peers from other regions. Drawing
on 34 semi-structured interviews (February–December 2025), Right-to-Information
institutional data, and semiotic analysis of 147 escort listings, we identify
five interlocking mechanisms that produce what we term racialised surplus
availability: a structural position wherein northeast women are
simultaneously hyper-desired as erotic commodities and hyper-excluded from
institutional safety nets. The paper documents the labour itself in granular
ethnographic detail—the acts, the bodily negotiations, the somatic aftermath—as
narrated by participants in their own teenage and young-adult register. We
reject both rescue and empowerment framings, arguing that student sex work in
this population is a rational, degrading, temporally bounded survival strategy
produced at the intersection of racial desire and institutional abandonment.
Racialised surplus availability; student sex work; northeast India; erotic labour; institutional abandonment; phenotypic commodification; situated agency; ethnographic intimacy
VOL.18, ISSUE No.1, March 2026