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RACISM AND THE MYTH OF TRAFFICKING
Nancy Lindisfarne and Jonathan Neale
[First published on Anne Bonny Pirate, 5 Feb 2021]
The myth of trafficking was invented by right-wing evangelical
Christians in the United States. It is untrue, racist and dangerous to
sex workers. Yet to many people it seems both feminist and left-wing.
This article explores that paradox.
In 2007 the US sociologist Kimberley Kay Huong went to
Vietnam to study sex trafficking. She found none, and decided to
study sex work, capital flows and masculinities instead.1 The striking
thing is that, even among critical academics in the US, no one had
suggested to her that maybe there was no trafficking in Vietnam.
Many other anthropologists and sociologists were having the same
experience in other parts of the world. When they did the actual
fieldwork, the trafficking disappeared.
In the 1990s an alliance between neoliberal corporations, antiprostitution feminists and evangelical protestants came together to
clean up the streets of America.2 Then they went on to attempt to
restructure sex work globally. The key moment for this global
restructuring was the passage of the Trafficking Victims Protection
Act in the US in 2000. That same year the United Nations agreed the
Palermo Protocol. This was followed by the passage of dozens of state
laws and local regulations in the US against various forms of
trafficking, and by similar laws in Brazil and other countries.
Kimberley Kay Hoang, Dealing in Desire: Asian Ascendancy,
Western Decline, and the Hidden Currencies of Global Sex Work,
Berkeley: University of California Press, 2015,
2 Elizabeth Bernstein, Temporarily Yours: Intimacy, Authority and
the Commerce of Sex Work, Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
2007.
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The anti-trafficking campaigners used the word trafficking in
four quite different ways. Trafficking could mean:
Helping people of all sorts to cross borders illegally, or
Helping women to cross borders to do sex work, or
Forcing women to do sex work inside a country, or
Helping or forcing young women under 18 to do sex work.
This slippage between these four quite different meanings is
what gives the word its ideological clout. As we shall see, a series of
myths about sex trafficking titillate and disturb in ways that
effectively disguise the contemporary racist onslaught on migrants.
And the slippage has other effects.
Let us be clear here. We think trafficking illegal immigrants is
a good deed. We want an equal world. Part of that has to be that
people can move freely from poor countries to richer countries.
Otherwise people will not be equal. The usual phrase for our political
position is to be in favour of ‘open borders’.3
This may seem utopian. After all, ‘they’ are coming to take
‘our’ jobs and drive down ‘our’ wages. At base, this is a matter of who
your ‘we’ is. Our we is not British people, or Americans. It is the
working people of the world, and the oppressed in any particular
situation. When we look at the pictures from Calais, we imagine we
are the people in that camp. Moreover, we have a general rule of
thumb for picking sides in political controversies, and we have
applied it in many other things we have written. The rule is to ask
who is being oppressed in this situation, and what do they say they
want? The answer in this case is obvious.
There are many borders where illegal immigrants need help
from specialists to cross to the other side. These specialists are almost
Teresa Hayter, No Borders: The Case against Immigration
Controls, Second edition, London: Pluto, 2004.
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always criminals. By definition, they are committing a crime. When
the law pushes any trade into the hands of criminals, there is a great
deal of abuse, overcharging, cheating and brutality. There is also
sometimes a lot of humanity. So it is with ‘people trafficking’.4
The discourse of trafficking, however, makes brutal
immigration policies acceptable to liberals. ‘We are not trying to stop
poor people from finding work in our country,’ the discourse says.
Rather, ‘we are trying to protect vulnerable people from human
traffickers.’ And by now, when you read about ‘human trafficking’
there are always resonances of ‘sex trafficking’ in the background.
The Anti-trafficking coalition
The strongest political force behind the passing of these US and
international laws was the evangelical protestant churches in
America. Since the 1980s these churches have been politically
conservative. At home, the churches were often strong supporters of
home schooling and the right wing of the Republican Party. They
were likely to deny climate change and campaign against abortion
and gay marriage. But the American evangelical protestants behind
anti-trafficking were different. After her research in San Francisco,
Elizabeth Bernstein did field research with anti-trafficking
evangelicals. She found that the activists were mostly women, mostly
young, mostly white, and almost all college graduates. They defended
what they saw as the traditional family, which was in fact a
conservative version of the new companionate marriage with entitled
children. Equality between men and women was important to them.
The leaders of these new campaigns were quite clear about the
necessity of moving on from the embarrassing old habits of attacking
For the complexities, see the excellent ethnography by Ruben
Andersson, Illegality Inc.: Clandestine Migration and the Business
of Bordering Europe, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2014.
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abortion and denying climate change. They saw themselves as ‘social
justice’ evangelicals.
The second wing of the anti-trafficking coalition were ‘carceral
feminists’ who wanted to use the law and imprisonment
(‘incarceration’) to defend women. They campaigned for laws against
pornography and prostitution, and the arrest of people who broke
those laws. These right-wing ‘radical’ feminists could not mobilise
many people on the ground – the evangelicals did that. But many
people who would have simply dismissed the evangelicals were
willing to listen to feminists.
The third wing of the coalition was the American government.
The key agencies were the State Department and the Agency for
International Development (AID). The government support for antitrafficking was bipartisan, under President Bush, President Obama
and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. The American diplomats and
aid officials enforced much of the legislation, and they funded the
anti-trafficking evangelical NGOs. They liked anti-trafficking because
it was seen as feminist and liberal, but it was also an instrument of
American power.
This strand of feminism was closely connected to the kinds of
marriages favoured by American diplomates and aid workers for
themselves. It also fitted with their support for American invasions
and occupations in the Middle East. The rhetoric of liberal
Islamophobia was that Muslim countries should be invaded because
they oppressed women. The feminism of the diplomates was also
strongly connected to what was called in aid agency-speak globally
the turn to ‘the empowerment of women.’ It was also known as work
with ‘women and girls’ and ‘mainstreaming gender’.
This fashion in aid work did not in fact empower women.
Typically, there was no attempt to take on governments or join in
national debates over abortion or gay rights. There were no
campaigns against sexual harassment by government officials, or
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even harassment within aid organisations or UN agencies. Often the
idea of violence against women was replaced with domestic violence.
The fourth wing of the anti-trafficking coalition is the
mainstream media. Over the last twenty years they have embraced
the trafficking narrative in tens of thousands of articles and news
segments. Almost all these news reports simply recycle the press
packs of the anti-trafficking organisations. In effect, these stories
present an opportunity to moralise while exciting readers and
viewers with visions of brown and yellow girls being abused.
The achievements of this coalition have been striking.
However, almost all the anthropologists and sociologists who have
done research with sex workers have said that trafficking is a
dishonest and destructive myth. Good examples can be found in the
accounts of sex work by Laura Agustin writing on Spain; by Rachel
Salazar Parrenas and Claudia Cojocaru on Japan; by Christine Chin
on Malaysia; by Pardis Mahdavi on Dubai; Josephine Ho on
Taiawan; John Frederick onn Nepal; Natasha Ahmad on Bangladesh;
Ana Paula da Silva, Thaddeus Gregory Blanchette, Andressa Raylane
Bento and Gregory Mitchell on Brazil, Edward Snajr on Bosnia and
Kazakhstan; Elizabeth Bernstein and Elana Shih on Thailand; and
Anthony Marcus, Amber Horning, Ric Curtis, Jo Sanson, Efram
Thompson and Jennifer Musto on the United States. This is a
formidable list. Each of these scholars provide a careful detailed
ethnography to contest the trafficking myth.5
The key works are Kamala Kempadoo. Jyoti Sanghere and Bandana
Pattanik, eds., Trafficking and Prostitution Reconsidered: New
Perspectives on Migration, Sex Work and Human Rights, Boulder:
Paradigm, 2005; Laura Maria Agustin, Sex at the Margins:
Migration, Labour Markets and the Rescue Industry, London: Zed,
2007; and Elizabeth Bernstein, Brokered Subjects: Sex, Trafficking,
and the Politics of Freedom, 2019.
See also Laura Agustin, ‘Migrants in the Mistress’s House: Other
Voices in the “Trafficking” Debate,’ Social Politics, March 2005, 96117; Rhacel Salazar Parrenas, Illicit Flirtations: Labor, Migration
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and Sex Trafficking in Tokyo, Stanford: Stanford University Press,
2011; Christine Chin, Cosmopolitan Sex Workers: Women and
Migration in a Global City, New York: Oxford University Press,
2013; Pardis Mahdavi, 2011, Gridlock: Labour, Migration and
Human Trafficking in Dubai, Stanford: Stanford University Press,
2011; Pardis Mahdavi, From Trafficking to Terror: Constructing
Global Social Problems, London: Routledge, 2013; Josephine Ho,
‘From Anti-trafficking to Social Disciplie: Or, the Changing Role of
“Women’s” NGOs in Taiwan’, in Kempadoo, 2005, 25-42; John
Frederick, ‘The Myth of Nepal-to-India Sex Trafficking: Its Creation,
Its Maintenance, and Its Influence on Anti-trafficking Interventions’,
in Kempadoo, 2005, 127-148; and Natasha Ahmad, ‘Trafficked
Persons or Economic Migrants? Bangladeshis in India’, in
Kempadoo, 2005, 211-228; Tara Burns, ‘Sex Trafficking: A Media
Guide,’ Tits and Sass, 24 March 2016.
It is notable how many of these books, written in fury against the
myth of trafficking, still include that word in the title, presumably at
the behest of the publisher.
See also Claudia Cojacaru, ‘Sex trafficking, captivity, and narrative:
constructing victimhood with the goal of salvation,’ Dialectical
Anthropology, 2015; Claudia Cojocaru, ‘My Experience is Mine to
Tell: Challenging the abolitionist victimhood framework,’ AntiTrafficking Review, Issue 7, 2016, 12-3; David A. Feingold,
‘Trafficking in Numbers: The Social Construction of Human
Trafficking Data’, in Sex, Drugs and Body Counts: The Politics of
Numbers in Global Crime and Conflict, ed. P. Andreas and K. M.
Greenhill, Ithica: Cornell University Press, 2010, 46-74; Thaddeus
Gregory Blanchette, ‘On bullshit and the trafficking of women: moral
entrepeneurs and the invention of trafficking of persons in Brazil,’
Dialectical Anthropology, 2012, 36: 107-125; Ana Paula da Silva,
Thaddeus Gregory Blanchette, Andressa Raylane Bento, ‘Cinderella
Deceived: Analysing a Brazilian Myth Regarding Trafficking in
Persons,’ Vibrant, Vol. 10 (2), 2014, 377-419; Gregory Mitchell,
‘Evangelical Ecstasy Meets Feminist Fury: Sex Trafficking, Moral
Panics and Homonationalism during Global Sporting Events,’ GLQ:
A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, 2016, 325-357.
Anthony Marcus, Robert Riggs, Sarah Rivera and Ric Curtis,
Experiences of Youth in the Sex Trade in Atlantic City, John Jay
College of Criminal Justice, 2016; Anthony Marcus, Amber Horning,
Ric Curtis, Jo Sanson and Efram Thompson, ‘Conflict and Agency
among Sex Workers and Pimps: A Closer Look at Domestic Minor
Sex Trafficking,’ The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political
and Social Science, 2014; Edward Snajr, ‘Beneath the master
narrative: human trafficking, myths of sexual slavery and
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All the organisations of sex workers, and the organisations
defending the rights of sex workers, have also come out against the
trafficking narrative. But despite this consensus, the narrative of
trafficking now dominates the public sphere. How did this happen?
Let’s begin with what ‘trafficking’ means. This is very difficult
to establish, because the word is used in several different ways by the
same people at the same time. This confusion of meaning is part of
how the narrative of trafficking works.
As we said above, there are four main meanings of the word:
Helping all sorts of people to cross borders illegally.
Helping women cross borders to do sex work.
Forcing women to do sex work inside a country.
Helping or forcing young women under 18 to do sex work.
In campaigns against trafficking, these definitions bleed into
each other all the time. So, for example, it is assumed that most
women who cross borders to do sex work are assisted by criminal
ethnographic realities,’ Dialectical Anthropology, 2013; Ric Curtis,
Karen Terry, Meredith Dank, Kirk Dombowski, and Bilal Khan,
Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children in New York City,
Volume One: The CESC Population in New York City: Size,
Characteristics, and Needs, John Jay College of Criminal Justice,
2008.
Elizabeth Bernstein, ‘The Sexual Politics of the “New Abolitionism”,
differences: A Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies, vol 18 (5), 2007,
128-151; Elizabeth Bernstein and Elana Shih, ‘The Erotics of
Authenticity: Sex Trafficking and “Reality Tourism” in Thailand,’
Social Politics, Fall 2014, 1-31; Elizabeth Bernstein, ‘Militarized
Humanitarianism Meets Carceral Feminism: The Politics of Sex,
Rights, and Freedom in Contemporary Antitrafficking Campaigns,’
Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, vol 36 (1), 2010,
45-71.
Suzanne Åsman, Bombay Going: Nepali Migrant Sex Workers in an
Anti-Trafficking Era, Lanham: Lexington, also looks important, but
we have not yet managed to read it.
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gangs which force them into sex slavery in the new country. As we
will see, this does sometimes happen, but it is untrue of the vast
majority of migrant sex workers. Or, as a second example, narratives
of trafficking are written as if the majority of sex workers are forced
into such work by violence. Again, as we will see, this too sometimes
happens, but it is rare.
Finally, most narratives of trafficking are written as if almost
all sex workers under eighteen are forced into the work and kept
enslaved by violence. As we will see, this sometimes happens, and we
have written about a particularly appalling example from Oxford
elsewhere.6 But again, the vast majority of underage sex workers have
chosen the work and are not controlled by violence.
These different meanings are tied to together by a central
assumption of the trafficking discourse. This is that no woman or girl
can really choose to do sex work. Or to turn it around, this is work
that cannot be chosen freely. So if a woman is doing it, she has been
forced, tricked or brainwashed. This assumption often takes the form
of an assertion that all prostitution is male violence. On the face of it,
this is a metaphor. It’s like saying that poverty is violence, or climate
change is violence. To which the answer has to be, no they’re not,
what you mean is that they are in some ways like violence.
But when the metaphor of prostitution as violence is repeated
often enough, it can begin to feel like a statement about reality.
These slides in meaning enable the practice of anti-trafficking,
which is to arrest women. And this is not a metaphor. For example,
the police in a country will raid a brothel and arrest all the foreign
women working there. The police issue a statement saying that all the
women have been trafficked and kept there by force.
The evidence for this is nothing more, or less, than that they
are foreigners.
Nancy Lindisfarne and Jonathan Neale, ‘Gang Abuse in Oxford,’
Anne Bonny Pirate, 2015.
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And what form does their rescue take? They are arrested,
taken to jail, sent on to a detention center, and then deported. This
can, and does, happen all the time in many countries to women who
have broken no law.
Two provisions in the American Trafficking Victim law affect
women in many parts of the world. One is that the US State
Department is required to rate countries each year on their efforts to
control trafficking. A country can be rated Tier 1 - Good, Tier 2 – Not
Good, Not Bad, Tier 2 with problems, or Tier 3 - Bad. The
methodology used to make the ratings involves no actual measures,
and has been seriously criticised by the Congressional General
Accounting Office, that admirable scourge of corruption and
dishonesty. America’s good friends mostly end up on Tier 1, as the US
always does, and America’s enemies on Tier 3. These ratings matter
to poorer countries, because there are serious sanctions in terms of
US aid and trade. So many countries go to considerable lengths to try
to look good.7
For obvious reasons the US government cannot directly police,
detain or deport sex workers in other countries. Nor can they usually
intervene directly in national debates about sexual politics. But the
American government can fund local NGOs which work with the
police and immigration officers to arrest and detain women. These
NGOs can also campaign for a crackdown on both immigrant and
native sex workers. These NGOs get their funding from a wide variety
governments and donors, but the majority of this funding comes
either directly from the American State Department or US AID, or
indirectly from international organisations funded by the US
government.
Pardis Mahdavi, Gridlock: Labour, Migration and Human
Trafficking in Dubai, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2011, is
very good on this.
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An important clause in the Trafficking Victims act says the US
government cannot fund any NGO unless they sign a statement
opposing all forms of prostitution. The effect of this clause is that
almost all the NGOs which work on trafficking are opposed to sex
work in principle, and in practice are hostile to sex workers. And
most discussions in ‘civil society’ are dominated by NGOs. This
means that most of the voices the public hear on trafficking are those
of hard-core anti-sex worker. For an illustration of how this works,
and how the ideology is diffused from the top down, let’s go to Spain.
The anthropologist Laura Agustín did fieldwork with women
who travelled from the Caribbean to Spain to do sex work. These
women had chosen sex work as the best option available to them.
Certainly, their options were limited because most of the women
were illegal immigrants. But it was still a choice, and celebrated as
such. Agustin had been to going-away parties in Dominican Republic
for women leaving to do sex work in Spain.
In Madrid, Agustin went to a three day conference on the
topic:
The hall is a large, ornate symbol of high culture in the centre
of the city. Marble columns, flags, formal flower arrangements
and official seals festoon the room. The height of the stage
promotes a sense of great distance between those above and
those below, about 300 middle-class women who work in
government and mainstream NGOs. The speakers are wellknown on the abolitionist circuit; many have performed
together in other countries. We hear that ‘prostitution’ is
slavery, and violence against women, that in ‘prostitution’ men
force women to have sex with them, that ‘trafficking’ and
‘prostitution’ are the same thing and that the only solutions
are abolition and punishment of the exploiters. For three days
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these ideas are repeated over and over again, with rarely a
word from the audience. . .
A psychiatrist who proclaims the universally harmful
effects of ‘prostitution’ on women is supported by a local
woman who runs a flat where troubled women can spend the
night; she mentions mental retardation as a typical attribute of
‘prostitutes’. A Swedish man is cut off abruptly in his
presentation on why men ‘use prostitutes’ when he makes a
slightly compassionate remark … For three days Holland is
referred to repeatedly as a demon, without explanation, and
no Dutch speaker has been invited . . .
Near the end, wine and canapes are served in an elegant
period room, all polished wood, flowers and beautiful pictures.
Given the non-stop representation of poverty, misery and
violence imposed by the conference, the rich setting is
offensive. I speak to an enraged Bolivian woman who cannot
believe what she has seen at this conference. . . We have both
noted the constant, agitated whispering occurring outside the
meeting room, compared with the audience’s complying inside
it.
The Bolivian woman tells Augustin that in her country people stand
up for what they believe in. All she sees at this conference are
Spaniards who are too scared to disagree with the officials.
Last-minute political pressure on the organisers has led to the
inclusion of local city projects in the programme. But only one
woman from a ‘rights-based’ project has had the courage to speak out
for sex workers in this venue:
Speaking last, she is mocked and misquoted by one of the
organisers. Amidst the hubbub, a desperate voice from the
audience asks to hear what some ‘prostitute’ has to say. At
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that, the representative of the international women’s
programme, wearing dark glasses, grabs the microphone and
barks: ‘We don’t have to talk to prostitutes to know what
prostitution is.’8
Then the woman in charge says that they have consensus from the
conference in support of further laws and initiatives against
trafficking. No one speaks up. Disgusted, a well-known activist nun
walks out.
The activist nuns have a flat where women who have been
forced into sex work can stay. Agustin visits the flat, and asks if the
nuns take away the women’s mobile phones so they cannot contact
the men they work with. Agustin asks this question because she
knows other refuges confiscate the phones.
No, the nuns say, of course not. Lots of times we want to grab
the phones and smash them against the wall, but we don’t.
What about if the women want to walk out of the flat and go
back to sex work? Agustin asks this question because she knows that
many of the rescue organisations for prostitutes in Spain are in fact
holding women against their will.
Well, the nuns answer, we don’t like it if they go back to the
life, but of course we don’t stop them.
Some of these nuns have marched carrying banners
supporting the rights of sex workers. For this, they have been called
terrible names. But they are nuns, so they work with the
downtrodden. They see Mary Magdalene as their sister, and they do
not bow down to Pontius Pilate.
Agustin attends another, very different, conference:
8
Agustin, 2007, 159-161.
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‘Seminario Internacional Sobre Prostitución’ is on the printed
programme, but the banner tacked to the platform adds ‘y
Tráfico’. A highly placed representative of the Ministry of
Labour inaugurates the event, followed by a university rector
and Spain’s representative at UN hearings on international
crime. All condemn ‘prostitution’, but spend most of their time
haranguing about ‘trafficking’ in unenlightening terms. When
these august figures leave, the real conference begins, and the
change of tone and terms is drastic.
Presentations are good, misleading research is not used
to represent ‘facts’, and presenters acknowledge the
complexity and variety of experiences among people who sell
sex. The speakers, mostly not Spanish, are names associated
with human and labour rights for sex workers . . .
Early on, in an obviously prepared action, a group of
women in the audience loudly and indignantly walk out . . .
Towards the end, a highly placed functionary arrives.
Obviously, neither she nor her speechwriter has been present
at the conference, since she reads, ‘As we have seen in the last
few days, prostitution is always a form of violence against
women’ and more of the usual rhetoric, which, in fact, since
the first morning, we have not heard. There are two different
reactions from the audience: the foreigners exchange
befuddled glances as the translated speech reaches them
through headphones, while the Spanish appear to accept the
incongruence without surprise. This is, after all, what is
always said in in public in Spain, so it’s not strange to hear it
now . . . The woman on the podium, eyes down on her reading,
is unaware of the unrest until a sex worker from Canada
stands up to object; when the translated words reach her, the
official is horrified.
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After the [Canadian’s] speech, a woman in the audience
launches into a tirade against her couched in the most virulent
personal terms: she is a traitor to feminism. We now realise
that the group that flounced out the first day is back with
reinforcements. In full tilt, the heckler will not let go of the
microphone, but the [Canadian] raises her voice to defend
herself. The moderator is unable either to stop the shouting
match or to make the usher wrest the microphone free. Other
members of the audience jump into the fray, and the
conference ends in disarray. It is a well-planned assault.9
Several things in the trafficking discourse stand out from Agustin’s
account. One is that the discourse against trafficking is organised by
upper class and professional women. For the upper class women, the
sex workers are trash. The nuns are repelled by the discourse
precisely because the nuns are not posh.
The second thing is the deep anger towards women sex
workers. Sex worker activists sometimes use the word ‘whorephobia’.
It does not just mean prejudice or fear. It means hatred.
The third thing is the entire absence of male sex workers from
this discourse. The fourth is that the anti-trafficking organisations
cannot engage with the sex worker organisations, or the rights
organisations, in any form of cooperation or public debate. If they do,
they risk losing their funding, because of the American rules. So they
resort immediately to mockery or shouting, or they walk out. They
have no alternative, if they are to keep the NGO going.
Who has ever met Maria?
How many women have been trafficked? The Brazilian
anthropologists Ana Paula da Silva, Thaddeus Gregory Blanchette,
9
Agustin, 2007, 180-181.
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and Andressa Raylane Bento have picked apart the standard
narraitve of trafficking used in their country. They call it the myth of
Maria. And they ask: who has ever met Maria?10
In November 2012, da Silva and her colleagues reported on
their research to a meeting of federal anti-trafficking investigators
and ‘several NGOs engaged in combatting trafficking in the state of
Rio de Janiero’. The anthropologists told these people that they had
done research with many women from Rio who had gone to Europe
to do sex work. But they explained that ‘everyone we had talked to
said that they had migrated of their own free will and likewise freely
worked as prostitutes.’
An intern from one of the anti-trafficking NGOs spoke up:
“Maybe the reason you’re not finding women who’ve been
forced or tricked into prostitution is due to the fact that you’ve
been working with prostitutes,” the intern said. “Our
organization works mostly with non-prostitutes, so that’s why
we find all these cases of women who’ve been lied to and
tricked or forced into prostitution overseas.”
“That could very well be the case,” we replied. “We are
certainly open to that possibility. How many cases of women,
tricked or forced into prostitution overseas has your
organisation discovered?”11
The intern said she had only been at the NGO for a year and did not
know of any cases. But she said one of the civil servants in the room
had worked for that NGO for most of the last decade, only recently
leaving. The intern asked her to answer the question.
The civil servant waffled on about how much outreach and
education work the NGO had done, not answering the question.
10
11
Da Silva, Blachette and Bento, 2014, 0000.,
Da Silva, Blachette and Bento, 2014, 401.
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The researchers asked again: “How many cases of women
tricked or forced into overseas prostitution did you discover?”
The civil servant replied, “There was one case involving two
women six or seven years ago.” She indicated that the president of
the NGO, also in the room, could tell them more about the two
women.
The NGO president could not remember the case. The people
from the NGO then talked it over and finally remembered ‘two
women who had migrated to Spain, worked as dancers and later
voluntarily decided to work as prostitutes because the money was
better, only to become frightened by possibility of coercion, returning
to Brazil.’12
In the end the authors, and all the assembled experts, could
find no between 2002 and 2012 who was actually trafficked
internationally from Rio, a state with a population of twelve million,
and the sex work capital of Brazil.
But here we run into one of the effects of the slides in meaning
of the word trafficking. Under pressure from the United States, Brazil
has passed a law against international sex trafficking. This law says
nothing about women being forced to work abroad. It merely makes
it a crime for any Brazilian to go abroad to do sex work, or to help
someone go abroad for that purpose.
Of course there have been many arrests of women for being
trafficked, or for attempting to be trafficked. That is why the federal
anti-trafficking investigators were in the room at the meeting. But all
the women who were arrested were going to Europe on purpose to be
sex workers.
Paula Da Silva and her colleagues also deconstruct the silences
and strange details in the standard myth of Maria in Brazil. These
12
Da Silva, Blachette and Bento, 2014, 402.
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same story elements are found in trafficking myths in many
countries.
The myth of Maria tells of a naïve young woman, almost
always black or of mixed race, usually working as a servant for a
white professional family. An unscrupulous man from an
international criminal gang tempts her into going abroad with
promises of good wages, interesting travel and decent work. When
Maria arrives in Spain, other members of the international gang
immediately take away her passport and keep her captive, forcing her
to do sex work. She is finally rescued.
There are some questions to ask of this story. The first is why
is Maria always innocent? Working class Brazilian women in their
late teens or early twenties are very impressive people, sophisticated,
tough and worldly wise. Moreover, in this story it never occurs to any
of the large numbers of sex workers in Brazil to go to Spain and do
the same job for better money.
And what’s with the passport? The gangsters taking away the
passport has become a standard feature of anti-trafficking stories all
over the world. You probably know at least one person who has had
their passport lost or stolen. If so, what did they do? They went to
their embassy or consulate, reported the passport lost or stolen, and
obtained a new one. Brazilian sex workers in Madrid could do that
too if they wanted. So why is that detail about the passport always
part of the story?
It is covering something in the story that is hard to believe.
How do the gangsters stop the women they have tricked from
running away? Keeping them locked up all the time requires a lot of
expensive minders, and it would probably put off at least some
punters. Given that there are many immigrants willing to work in the
sex trade, imprisoning women makes no economic sense.
This is linked to another odd silence in the narrative. How did
Maria escape? In trafficking narratives around the world, this
The Myth of Trafficking
18
moment is almost always covered in a phrase or a sentence. But in
any media piece, this should be one of the most exciting bits of the
story. The desperate woman running down the street, hiding in a
doorway, stopping a passer-by and begging for help in little bits of
Spanish, the thugs scouring the streets for her. Instead, there is
nothing.
There are three reasons for this silence. The usual one, as with
the story of Maria, is that the story never happened. The second is
that any believable story of escape would suggest that many other
women can and do escape pretty quickly, because it is so hard to hold
people against their will. The third is that the woman was arrested in
a police sweep and then taken to a refuge run by an NGO, where she
was detained. This is a powerful story, but not story the antitrafficking NGO wants to tell.
Also, notice that in the story the woman always has to be naïve
about the meaning of the promised work in Europe. Because it is
hard to imagine how criminals force unwilling women to get on
airplanes, sit in their seats for nine hours, wait in the immigration
line at the airport for an hour, and then talk convincingly to the
immigration officials.
It is widely believed, however, that criminals force women to
go the United States or Europe as unwilling captives. The media in
the United States have invented a way that this could happen, in a
narrative that is now widely used on television and in novels. In this
narrative, a group of sex slaves are imprisoned in a shipping
container and moved on boats and in trucks. Sometimes they are
rescued by a hero who opens the container. More often the slave
women suffocate in the container or die of thirst.
We have done a reasonably good search on Google, and can
say with some confidence that scenario has never happened
anywhere on earth. What does happen, often enough, in many
countries, is that a group of migrants are found thirsty, suffocating or
The Myth of Trafficking
19
dead in the back of a shipping container or a truck. Many of these
stories are heart rending. All of them involve mixed groups of men
and women, and often children, who got into the truck or the
shipping container because they wanted to cross borders illegally to
live and work.
These tragedies, when they occur, are appalling. Media
coverage usually blames the ‘people traffickers’, when in fact it is the
border controls that have put peoples’ lives at risk. The same thing
happens when migrants drown trying to reach Europe on
overcrowded small boats. Many hundreds of people die this way each
year. When they do, the traffickers who arranged the boat trip are
blamed. No media blame the officials who will not allow people to
migrate by ferry and land safely.
What seems to be happening with the meme of the sex slaves
in the container is that these real migrant tragedies have been
reappropriated and reimagined for another purpose. After all, the
people who offer the container passage to working migrants are
‘traffickers’, and the criminals who control sex slaves are ‘traffickers’
too. Use the same word, and they must be the same thing. As a
salacious bonus, the viewers get to see pictures of partly clothed or
naked dead Ukrainians. 13
From Romania to Japan
Claudia Cojocaru is a criminologist at the John Jay College of
Criminal Justice in New York. Her work is particularly interesting
because she was ‘trafficked’, but has been rejected by anti-traffickers
because she is the wrong kind of trafficked person. 14
See, for example, Ed Burns and David Simon, creators, The Wire,
Season 2, 2003; or Lee Child’s Jack Reacher book, 2010, Worth
Dying For, London; Bantam, 2010.
14 Cojocaru, 2015 and 2016.
13
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Cojocaru grew up in a village in Romania. As opportunities for
migration opened up after 1989, many young women from her village
went abroad to work. When they came back they had clearly been
making good money, and said they had been working as bar staff,
maids, or dancers. No one questioned them further. Everyone had a
pretty good idea that sex work was also involved. But Cojacaru didn’t
want to go that way. So she applied for work in a resort hotel at the
other end of Romania. When she got there, the man who hired her
beat her up to force her to do sex work. Within weeks, she had run
away. That was the first time she was trafficked.
The second time was when she went to work in Japan. Again,
she was told she would be doing hotel work. When she arrived, and
refused to do sex work, she was beaten in front of all the other
women who worked there. She was humiliated and cowed. At the end
of six months she went home, and then went back to Japan. This time
she stayed for eight years, working at several venues.
This time Cojacaru had a plan. In every place she did sex work
in Japan, a minority of the women had indeed been tricked or forced
into the work. The majority had volunteered for the work. In all the
venues, these free workers spent a lot of time mentoring the
trafficked women, explaining to them how to survive in this situation,
how to deal with clients, how to leave the employer, and how to find
other work. As a result, almost no one remained ‘trafficked’.
Cojocaru’s purpose, over those eight years, was to find other
tricked and forced women workers and help them get free. She rented
her own apartment, and offered other women a bed for a time while
they got on their feet and found ‘freelance work’. This was admirable,
even heroic.
Cojocaru tells a hilarious, and chilling story, of talking about
her experiences being trafficked to a class of law students at New
York University. The two professors who invited her to speak began
by being sympathetic to her as a vulnerable and abused woman. But
The Myth of Trafficking
21
they kept pressing her to tell humiliating stories in front of a room
full of people. They grew angry whenever she tried to talk about how
people could escape coercion and work on their own. Cojocaru ended
up looking at the floor, meeting the eyes of none of those students,
because she knew what she would see in their eyes was an unpleasant
mixture of pity and excitement.
Teenage sex workers in the US
Accounts of underage sex workers in the United States offer examples
of the other problems with the trafficking narrative. The first issue
concerns the age of consent. Under trafficking laws in America, it is
illegal for anyone under the age of 18 to sell sex. It is not necessarily
illegal for those same people to have sex. In 32 of the 50 United
States, the age of consent at which a boy or girl can decide to have sex
is 16. In another ten states, the age of consent is 17. Only in ten states
is the age of consent 18. Across Canada it is 16, and the average age of
consent in Europe is 15.15
Moreover, many the young American women below the age of
consent in their state are having consensual sex. The Centre for
Disease Control does an excellent sample survey of teenage health. In
2015, they report, 58% of girls in twelfth grade had already had sex.
Twelfth graders are mostly aged 17 or 18. The CDC also says that 48%
of eleventh grade girls, 34% of tenth grade girls, and 21% of ninth
grade girls have already had sex. These figures probably
In European countries the median age of consent is 15. In 15
European countries, including Austria, Germany, Italy and Portugal,
the age of consent is 14. In 12 European countries, including
Denmark, France, Greece, Ireland, Poland and Switzerland, it’s 15. In
another 20 European countries, including Finland, Netherlands,
Norway, Russia, Spain, Switzerland and the UK, the age of consent is
16.
15
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22
underestimate the real rates, because they do not include girls who
have dropped out of high school.16
In other words, a solid majority of American women have sex
before they are 18. The women under 18 selling sex are part of that
majority. But the consequences of trafficking laws for teenage sex
workers in America are often serious. Young women who have been
caught selling sex are routinely locked up for extended periods,
without being sentenced or charged with any offense. They are simply
detained. This is not legal, but it is common.
In Control and Protect, Jennifer Musto explains how this
works: ‘Cara, an infectiously energetic Christian turned
antitrafficking advocate … described what protection looks like on the
ground at Sunny Dawn, the shelter she runs.’
Cara explains to Musto that ankle monitor bracelets are
essential to stop teens running away:
This piece of technology is huge in keeping them safe … All I
can share with you right now is my experiences of the thirtysix or forty kinds that we’ve dealt with … I can tell you right
now that what they need [is] to be treated as if they are a
victim of a crime. However, we can’t treat them like typical
victims of a crime who come to you wanting help. I have to
convince them that they’re a victim of a crime … So they don’t
necessarily even want to stop what they’re doing … If we don’t
have a way to keep them safe, they’re just going to go back on
the street. So right now, that’s juvenile hall and ankle
monitors.
Laura Kann et al, Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance – United
States, 2015, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, MMWR,
June 10, 2016, 26.
16
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23
Juvenile hall is a prison for young people. What Cara is saying is that
she puts ankle bracelet monitors on the teenagers and if those
bracelets show they are leaving Sunny Dawn, perhaps to go back to
sex work, she has the deputy sheriffs catch them and put them in
prison. Because, Cara says:
If we take that away from law enforcement, if we say, “Okay,
we’re going to do safe harbour law, and that means none of
those children can be taken to juvenile hall or ankle monitored
for prosecution at all,” then the question is, what are we going
to do? … And that’s hard, because they’re not a probation kid?
These are hard questions that we’ve got to wrestle with, but in
the end, it comes down to keeping the kids safe, and how are
we going to do that?17
Musto found example after example of this detention of juveniles
across the US, and cooperation between the police and NGOs was
common. In many jurisdictions, volunteers or full-time workers from
anti-trafficking campaigns scoured the internet and Facebook for
evidence of possible juvenile sex work. They then informed the
police.
Anti-trafficking workers also routinely accompanied police on
raids. As soon as the arrests were made, the anti-trafficking activists
took over minding the young women. The police wanted convictions
of the men they had arrested, who they assumed were pimps. For that
they needed testimony from the young women against the young
men. The NGO workers talked privately and sympathetically with the
girls, and tried to convince them to help the police.
The girls usually resisted, from a variety of motives. Some of
them were afraid of what the man would do to them or their families.
17
Musto, 5-6.
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24
Some of them loved the man. In other cases he was a friend. Some of
them knew that they had wanted to do the work, and the man had
helped them. For many of them, the man was also the only person
who would help them get a lawyer so they could escape detention.
If the young woman refused to testify, she was often detained
in a facility run by the NGO, or in a jail. This was often phrased as
being for her own protection. That ignored just how common rape
and sexual abuse is for girls jails, prisons and care homes.
There are larger issues at stake, too. In a book review on the
sex workers’ site Tits and Sass, Fae Mills writes:
When I got arrested recently, my copy of Domestic Minor Sex
Trafficking: Beyond Victims and Villains by Alexandra
Lutnick came along with me to jail… After bail, tearing open
my blue possessions bag, I couldn’t help thinking this book
was meant to be in lockup with me. It wasn’t published solely
for those with degrees in social service… These minors should
be viewed with respect, as conscious proponents of their own
motives… Those left behind in systems of oppression are far
more likely to be involved in sex works, as an escape from
their abusers as well as systemic violence. As a young femme,
there was nowhere for me to go besides the streets. There was
money there, opportunity for advancement and excitement. 18
Most important, it is simply not true that sex workers under eighteen
are forced into sex work and controlled by pimps. The best field
studies for what happens in practice in the US were done by Anthony
Fae Mills, ‘Domestic Minor Sex Trafficking: Beyond Victims and
Villains’, Tits and Sass, 11 August 2016. The book is Alexandra
Lutnick: Domestic Minor Sex Trafficking: Beyond Victims and
Villains, New York, Columbia University Press, 2016.
18
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25
Master, Amber Horning, Ric Curtis and their colleagues at John Jay
College of Criminal Justice between 2008 and 2012.19
They did two research projects. One was with young people
selling sex on the street in New York City. For this project, they made
friends with people on the street and then worked through those
people’s contacts to find a much larger sample.
Their second research project was in Atlantic City. This was a
largely successful attempt to survey the whole of street sex work in
the city. They used interviews combined with participant observation
– hanging out and chatting – and one of the researchers lived in
several boarding houses also used by sex workers.
The study used both professors and students as researchers,
and they managed to have someone on the streets four nights a week
for months. At first the sex workers suspected they were cops. But as
the researchers returned night after night, and never bought either
sex or drugs, the workers warmed to them. The pimps working on the
streets became especially supportive, and did everything they could
to direct the researchers to sex workers they might have missed. Both
sex workers and pimps felt that an honest book about their world
would be a good thing.
The women sex workers warned the researchers, however, not
to put too much faith in what they called ‘pimp talk’. They said that
pimps liked to boast, and that they would greatly exaggerate the
amount of control or influence they had over women and girls.
Anthony Marcus, Amber Horning, Ric Curtis, Jo Sanson and Efram
Thompson, ‘Conflict and Agency among Sex Workers and Pimps: A
Closer Look at Domestic Minor Sex Trafficking,’ The ANNALS of the
American Academy of Political and Social Science, 2014; Ric Curtis,
Karen Terry, Meredith Dank, Kirk Dombowski, and Bilal Khan,
Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children in New York City,
Volume One: The CESC Population in New York City: Size,
Characteristics, and Needs, John Jay College of Criminal Justice,
2008; Anthony Marcus, Robert Riggs, Sarah Rivera and Ric Curtis,
Experiences of Youth in the Sex Trade in Atlantic City, John Jay
College of Criminal Justice, 2016.
19
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26
One of the virtues of both the New York and Atlantic City
studies is that they included large numbers of young men selling sex,
almost as many as the young women. The Atlantic City study,
however, had difficulty locating sex workers under eighteen. In the
end, they could only find twelve, almost certainly because there were
only twelve in the whole city. So the researchers included many men
and women under twenty-four who had begun sex work before they
were eighteen. They had no difficulty finding those people.
The New York and Atlantic City studies between them
interviewed 119 girls, 111 boys, and 19 transgender youth. Most of the
young sex workers in both cities worked without a pimp, and had
found their own way into the industry. In New York, 14% of the
young women and 8% of the young men had a pimp. To put it the
other way round, 86% of young women and 92% of young men were
working the street without a pimp. 16% of young women, 1% of young
men and none of the trans people had started work with a pimp. For
47% of the total, it was a friend who introduced them into the work.
For 23%, it was a customer who came up to them and suggested it.
Those who had had pimps usually said he had been violent to
them at some point. However, every one of the sex workers had
experienced violence during their lives at the hands of someone other
than a pimp. The pimps did not stand out, and the violence did not
ensure control. Anthony Marcus and his colleagues write that:
Nearly all sex workers in both Atlantic City and New York City
described experiencing increasing, rather than decreasing,
agency and control over their work over time, regardless of
whether they had pimps. In all three studies, we found a range
of stories of young women and men who had left pimps
because they were violent, mentally abusive, lazy, poor
business associates, unable to protect them, extracting too
much money, or no longer fun to be around. When they left
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27
such pimps, they typically aligned with a new pimp, worked
and lived alone or in cooperative arrangements with peers, or
joined an escort service.20
The researchers did discover that many of the young people relied on
what they called ‘market facilitators’ and ‘spot pimps’. These were
working pimps, friends, casino staff and local small businessmen and
women. They would refer potential clients in return for a small
payment from the sex worker. Each sex worker would rely on several
of these people, and they did not control the worker. The question the
researchers asked in interviews to distinguish pimps from such
tipsters was ‘Does he have rules?’
Fully 87% of the New York sample said they wanted to get out
of sex work. When asked what was stopping them, no one mentioned
a pimp. More than half mentioned housing. These people were
usually homeless and living on the streets, or moving between
shelters and crashing with friends.
Some young people, it is true, did describe themselves as
unable to escape the control of violent men who kept them in thrall.
They were 2% of the total sample. In every case, the controller was
either a parent or someone performing the role of a guardian. None
of them were street pimps.
Anti-trafficking, though, targets the street pimps relentlessly.
The minimum penalty for being a pimp for someone under eighteen
is now 15 years, and some pimps are sentenced to 99 years. Mass
imprisonment over four decades now makes such punishments seem
normal, even acceptable.
If the young men are convicted of trafficking, it does not
necessarily mean they have committed a violent crime. The law does
not say that anyone forcing a minor to have sex is trafficking. Rather,
20
Curtis et al, 2014, 232.
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28
it says that anyone who profits from a minor having sex is guilty of
trafficking, even if she is of age to have sex legally, and even if she
asked him to help.
Elizabeth Bernstein describes one of the consequences:
The carceral feminist commitment to heteronormative family
values, crime control, and the putative rescue and restoration
of victims . . . and the broad social appeal of this agenda is
powerfully illustrated by the recent film Very Young Girls. The
film has been shown not only in diverse feminist venues but
also at the U. S. State Department [and] various evangelical
megachurches . . . The film seeks to garner sympathy for
young African-American women who find themselves trapped
in the street-level sexual economy. By framing the women as
“very young girls” (in the promotional poster for the film, the
seated protagonist is depicted as so small that her feet dangle
from the chair) and as the innocent victims of sexual abuse (a
category that has historically been reserved for white and nonsex-working victims), the film can convincingly present its
perspective as anti-racist and progressive. Yet the young
women’s innocence in the film is achieved at the cost of
completely demonizing the young African-American men who
profit from their earnings as irredeemably criminal and subhuman. The film relentlessly strips away the humanity of
young African-America men in the street economy along with
the complex tangle of factors beyond prostitution (including
racism and poverty) that shape the girls’ lives. At one
screening of the film that I attended at a white-shoe [posh] law
firm in New York, following the film some audience members
The Myth of Trafficking
29
called for the pimps not only to be locked away indefinitely but
to be physically assaulted.21
In the midst of all this, we must also remember that the majority of
sex workers on the streets in New York are not black, that the large
majority do not have a pimp, and that the great majority of American
sex workers do not work on the streets. The ‘new abolitionism’ of
anti-trafficking is part of the project of cleansing the streets and
deporting immigrant workers.
Modern Slavery
Then there’s the media. There have been tens of thousands of media
reports on trafficking and ‘modern slavery’ in the last decade. This
metaphor is descended from the campaigns against the ‘white slave
trade’ in the early twentieth century. These campaigns, and
thousands of newspaper stories, particularly targeted immigrant sex
workers in the United States. Anti-trafficking campaigners never
refer directly to this heritage. For one thing, ‘white slave’ does not
sound so good now. But, as Jo Doezema has demonstrated in Sex
Slaves and Discourse Masters, the links are clear.22
Elizabeth Bernstein again, on sex slavery:
On Sunday, February 18, 2007, 5,800 Protestant churches
throughout the United States sang the song “Amazing Grace”
during their services, commemorating the two-hundredth
anniversary of the abolition of slavery in England. As the
congregants sang the lyrics of John Newton, the British ship
captain turned abolitionist, they were simultaneously
contributing to a growing political movement and to the
Bernstein, 2010, 57-58.
Jo Doezema, Sex Slaves and Discourse Masters: The Construction
of Trafficking, London: Zed, 2010.
21
22
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30
promotion of a just released film. The film, Amazing Grace,
which focuses on the role played by British parliamentarian
William Wilberforce’s evangelical Christian faith in his
dedication to the nineteenth-century abolitionist cause, was
produced in explicit coordination with a campaign to combat
“modern day” forms of slavery, of which the organized Sunday
sing-along was a part. “Slavery still exists,” notes the movie’s
Amazing Change campaign Web site, which directs Webbrowsers to “become modern-day abolitionists” through
prayer, donations to sponsored faith-based organizations, and
the purchase of Amazing Change t-shirts, buttons, and caps.
As Gary Haugen, founder of the International Justice Mission
(one of the campaign’s four sponsored humanitarian
organizations) has sought to emphasize, “[T]here are
approximately twenty-seven million slaves in our world
today—not metaphorical slaves, but actual slaves. That’s more
slaves in our world today than were extracted from Africa
during four hundred years of the transatlantic slave trade.”23
Approximately twenty-seven million? No one has done any counting.
The number is invented. What they mean by slavery is that the
employer has total control of the worker. And the worker they are
thinking of most is a sex worker, though they are willing to include
anyone in a sweatshop.
This modern slavery differs from the old fashioned slavery of
Jamaica and Virginia in several ways. The people are not owned. The
owners do not buy and sell them. The slavery does not last for life.
The slavery is not legal. There are no special slave ships. The owners
do not have the legal right to punish their slaves in public. If the slave
runs away, the police will not bring her back.
23
Bernstein, 2007, 128-129.
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31
In other words, modern slavery is not slavery. It’s a metaphor
for bad treatment, exploitation and violence towards workers. In
which case, why stop at twenty-seven million?
Trafficking is a myth, it’s racist, it’s sexist, and it harms
immigrants and sex workers.
The Myth of Trafficking