Revision as of 13:31, 4 August 2006 editSchneelocke (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users11,221 editsm →Forced prostitution: fmt← Previous edit | Revision as of 23:14, 24 August 2006 edit undoNikkicraft (talk | contribs)817 edits →Quality Organizations: added relevant articles, links and resourcesNext edit → | ||
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* -- ABC's Primetime Fakery, Debbie Nathan | * -- ABC's Primetime Fakery, Debbie Nathan | ||
== Relevant Articles, Links & Resources == | |||
== Quality Organizations == | |||
* Andrea Dworkin Keynote Speech at International Trafficking Conference, 1989. ''(Audio File: 22 min, 128 Kbps, mp3)'' | |||
* on Pornography and Prostitution | |||
* | * | ||
* | * | ||
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* | * | ||
* [http://www.ecmafrica.org --Every Child Ministries-Slave Children | * | ||
* feminist activism against various forms of prostitution | |||
* Human Trafficking website | |||
* helps prostituted women recover. Located in Washington, D.C. | |||
* See ] | |||
* ''Prostitution Recovery Program. Excellent articles, resources and information.'' | |||
* by Melissa Farley 2004 ''Violence Against Women'' 10: 1087-1125. | |||
* by Andrea Dworkin | |||
*. D. Brewer et. al. ''Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A.'' 2000 ]; 97(22): 1238512388. | |||
* by Catharine A. MacKinnon | |||
* by Melissa Farley, Ann Cotton., Jacqueline Lynne, Sybile Zumbeck, Frida Spiwak, Maria E. Reyes, Dinorah Alvarez, Ufuk Sezgin 2003 Journal of Trauma Practice 2 (3/4): 33-74. | |||
* by Melissa Farley, ''Violence Against Women'' 1(7): 971–977, July 2005 | |||
* “Prostitution, Trafficking, and Cultural Amnesia: What We Must Not Know in Order To Keep the Business of Sexual Exploitation Running Smoothly” by Melissa Farley 2006 Yale Journal of Law and Feminism 18:109-144. | |||
* by Melissa Farley and Jacqueline Lynne 2005 ''Fourth World Journal'' Vol. 6 No. 1, pp 1-29. | |||
* by Melissa Farley 2005 | |||
* - A Marxist analysis of prostitution | |||
] | ] |
Revision as of 23:14, 24 August 2006
For other uses, see Sexual slavery (disambiguation).Sexual slavery is a special case of slavery which includes various different practices:
- forced prostitution
- single-owner sexual slavery
- ritual slavery, sometimes associated with traditional religious practices
- slavery for primarily non-sexual purposes where sex is common or permissible
In general, the nature of slavery means that the slave is de facto available for sex, and ordinary social conventions and legal protections that would otherwise constrain an owner's actions are not effective. Female slaves are at highest risk of sexual abuse and sexual slavery.
The term "consensual sexual slavery" (meaning see for example BDSM and total power exchange) has occasionally been used, but should not be confused with true slavery.
Modern-day sexual slavery
Forced prostitution
Forced prostitution is a form of sexual slavery that is often directed at immigrants to Western and Asian countries. Often the "owners" of these people will confiscate passports and/or money in order to make the women involved completely reliant on them. This practice, also known as sex trafficking or human trafficking, is illegal in most countries.
Human trafficking is not the same as people smuggling. A smuggler will facilitate illegal entry into a country for a fee, but on arrival at their destination, the smuggled person is free; the trafficking victim is enslaved. Traffickers use coercive tactics including deception, fraud, intimidation, isolation, threat and use of physical force, debt bondage or even force-feeding with drugs of abuse to control their victims. Women are typically recruited with promises of good, legal jobs in other countries or provinces, or are tricked into a false 'marriage', and, lacking better options at home, agree to migrate. Traffickers arrange the travel and job placements, the women are escorted to their destinations and delivered to the employers. Upon reaching their destinations, some women learn that they have been deceived about the nature of the work they will do; most have been lied to about the financial arrangements and conditions of their employment; and all find themselves in coercive and abusive situations and kept in a financial situation that they are stuck in a form of debt bondage from which escape is both difficult and dangerous.
A US Government report published in 2003, estimates that 800,000-900,000 people worldwide are trafficked across borders each year, the majority to Southeast Asia, Japan, Europe and North America. The trafficking of women has also been recorded (in high numbers) in South Asia and the Middle East and from Latin America into the United States. Since the mid 1990s, with the opening up of the former Soviet Union, the end of the wars in the former Yugoslavia and the opening up of East and South East Asia, there has been an increase in the trafficking in human beings. See the main article on the trafficking of human beings.
A recent development should be noted that proponents of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA) in the United States, and Sweden's Act On Prohibiting The Purchase Of Sexual Services seek to define all forms of prostitution as exploitive or de facto slavery, and place emphasis on suppressing the demand for sex services, by prosecuting profiteers and customers. While this effort is advanced as a means to protect trafficked children and women, that are variously estimated at 20,000-100,000 annually in the United States, who have issued numerous critiques of these laws as another form of prohibition and stigmatization, that serve mainly to marginalize sex workers. Prostitute rights organizations argue that decriminalization and extension of labor rights to sex workers is more effective in ensuring their economic, mental and medical health than any form of prohibition.
The term sex worker itself is rejected by the advocates of anti-slavery laws, who argue women cannot choose sex as an economic activity, and claim it is the criminal networks and customer demand that are the driving forces, not economic necessity.
Sexual slavery in the United States
In 2002, the US Department of State repeated an earlier CIA estimate that each year, about 50,000 women and children are brought against their will to the United States for sexual exploitation.. The former Secretary of State Colin Powell said that "Here and abroad, the victims of trafficking toil under inhuman conditions -- in brothels, sweatshops, fields and even in private homes."
Sexual slavery in Africa
Sex slavery is a problem in some parts of Africa. In many African communities marrying women requires paying a wedding dowry to her family, which lessens the perceived barrier to female slavery. The colonial powers abolished slavery in the 19th century, but in areas outside their jurisdiction, such as the Mahdist empire in Sudan, the practice continued to thrive. Nowadays, institutional slavery has been banned worldwide, but there are numerous reports of women sex slaves in areas without an effective government control, such as until recently, Sudan, Liberia, Sierra Leone, northern Uganda and Kongo. In Zimbabwe, the government is believed to train its youth militia, the Border Gezi Youth, to use rape as a tactic.
In Niger and Mauritania, sexual slavery also exists.
In Ghana, Togo, and Benin, a form of religious prostitution known as trokosi or ritual servitude keeps thousands of girls and women in traditional shrines against their will, forcing them to act as "wives of the gods," the shrine priests performing the sexual function in place of the gods. (The Trokosi System, Mark Wisdom, FESLIM--Fetish Slaves Liberation Movement, PO Box 21, Adidome, Ghana, 2001.) This can be compared with the devadasi system in India.
Sexual slavery in the Middle East
In the contemporary Middle East, sexual slavery is uncommon. However, trafficking of women does exist there, from Iran, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan to the Persian Gulf states. Israel and Turkey have also a significant sex trade-much of it involving women from Eastern Europe.
Sexual slavery in the past
Sexual slavery in North America
In the mid-19th century in the U.S., there was a white slavery scare which suggested that large numbers of white women were being kidnapped and forced into prostitution. The prevalence of this practice was greatly exaggerated due to xenophobia, and this phenomenon is generally regarded today as having been an example of a moral panic.
In fact, at that time, the US victims of sexual slavery were overwhelmingly women of African descent, held as slaves, often purchased with sexual exploitation as the primary goal. A supposedly true story of one such girl, purchased as a sexual slave when she was fourteen, is told in "Celia, A Slave," by Melton A. Mclaurin, and such practice is also widely referred to in other literature discussing the era, for instance Roots by Alex Haley. Frederick Douglass, in his autobiography, described the sale of female slaves openly advertised for sexual purposes at slave auctions in the 19th century United States. According to John A. Morone's book Hellfire Nation, slaveowners in the American South openly admitted to practicing sexual slavery.
Sexual slavery in East and Southeast Asia during World War II
During World War II, hundreds of thousands of mostly Asian women were tricked or otherwise coerced into serving the Japanese army as prostitutes in the wartime brothels of Asia during the Japanese occupation of Korea, China and other parts of South East Asia.
Many of them forced into sexual slavery by Japan and raped dozens of times daily by Japanese soldiers, the euphemistically named "comfort women" have faced lives of enduring shame.
Sexual slavery in Japan post World War II
The Japanese Home Ministry established a number of brothels euphemistically named Recreation and Amusement Association in August 1945 to serve the occupation forces. However, most of the prostitutes involved seem to have been Japanese women forced into the work through economic destitution, not physical coercion. The system was officially terminated in January 1946, by order of higher military commanders from the main occupying power, the United States.
Sexual slavery in the Middle East
Main article: Arab slave tradeSlave trade, including trade of sex slaves was a regular practice in the Middle East up to the twentieth century, when intervention of Western colonial powers effectively ended this trade. The main source for those slaves were Sub-Saharan Africa and subjugated peoples from the Caucasus.
Further reading
- Lal, K. S. Muslim Slave System in Medieval India (1994), chapter XII: "Sex Slavery" ISBN 8185689679
See also
External references
- Sex trade's reliance on forced labour - BBC
- A modern slave's brutal odyssey – BBC
- 'Bosnia: Sex Slave Recounts Her Ordeal - Institute for War & Peace Reporting
- 'Asia's sex trade is 'slavery' - BBC
- 'Iran's Sex Slaves Suffer Hideously Under Mullahs - Iranfocus'
- 'Streets of despair - The Observer
- ‘They said I wasn’t human but something that can be bought’ – The Times
- ‘Mine for £1,300: Ileana, the teenage sex slave ready to work in London’ – The Sunday Telegraph
- eText of Heathen Slaves and Christian Rulers (1907) by Elizabeth Wheeler Andrew and Katharine Caroline Bushnell, at Project Gutenberg. A work about "Oriental brothel slavery on the Pacific Coast".
- Human Rights Abuses Affecting Trafficked Women in Israeli's Sex Industry - Amnesty International
- Sex slaves and the U.S. military - Army Times
- Womens Issues and Worldwide Sex Slavery Trafficking
- Traditionalist Islamic View on Sex Slavery
- Celia, a slave (ISBN 0-38-071935-5)
- Roots (ISBN 0-44-017464-3)
- The Natashas: Inside the New Global Sex Trade, by Victor Malarek. (ISBN 1559707356)
- Prostitution Research
- The "Teen Sex Slave" Scams -- ABC's Primetime Fakery, Debbie Nathan
Relevant Articles, Links & Resources
- Andrea Dworkin: Why Men Like Prostitution So Much Andrea Dworkin Keynote Speech at International Trafficking Conference, 1989. (Audio File: 22 min, 128 Kbps, mp3)
- Andrea Dworkin's Attorney General's Commission Testimony on Pornography and Prostitution
- World-wide umbrella organization (Coalition Against Trafficking in Women - CATW)
- Sanlaap Organization in Kolkata, India
- Coalition to Abolish Slavery and Trafficking (CAST) in Los Angeles, CA
- Polaris, based in Tokyo and Washington DC
- Amnesty International
- Sex Workers Outreach Project
- Prostitutes Education Network
- --Every Child Ministries-Slave Children
- Equality Now feminist activism against various forms of prostitution
- Fair Fund Human Trafficking website
- Polaris Project helps prostituted women recover. Located in Washington, D.C.
- Prostitution Research & Education. See Melissa Farley
- The Lola Greene Baldwin FoundationProstitution Recovery Program. Excellent articles, resources and information.
- 'Bad for the Body, Bad for the heart': Prostitution Harms Women Even if Legalized or Decriminalized by Melissa Farley 2004 Violence Against Women 10: 1087-1125.
- Prostitution and Male Supremacy by Andrea Dworkin
- Prostitution and the sex discrepancy in reported number of sexual partners. D. Brewer et. al. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2000 24 October; 97(22): 1238512388.
- Prostitution and Civil Rights by Catharine A. MacKinnon
- Prostitution and Trafficking in 9 Countries: Update on Violence and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder by Melissa Farley, Ann Cotton., Jacqueline Lynne, Sybile Zumbeck, Frida Spiwak, Maria E. Reyes, Dinorah Alvarez, Ufuk Sezgin 2003 Journal of Trauma Practice 2 (3/4): 33-74.
- "Prostitution harms women even if indoors: Reply to Weitzer" by Melissa Farley, Violence Against Women 1(7): 971–977, July 2005
- “Prostitution, Trafficking, and Cultural Amnesia: What We Must Not Know in Order To Keep the Business of Sexual Exploitation Running Smoothly” by Melissa Farley 2006 Yale Journal of Law and Feminism 18:109-144.
- "Prostitution of Indigenous Women": Sex Inequality and the Colonization of Canada's First Nation Women by Melissa Farley and Jacqueline Lynne 2005 Fourth World Journal Vol. 6 No. 1, pp 1-29.
- Unequal by Melissa Farley 2005
- The question of prostitution - A Marxist analysis of prostitution