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The myth of trafficking

Brendan O'Neill

Published 27 March 2008

Most migrant women, including those in the sex industry, have made a clear decision, says a new study, to leave home and take their chances abroad. They are not "passive victims" in need of "saving" or sending back by western campaigners.
Sex at the Margins: Migration, Labour Markets and the Rescue Industry
Laura María Agustín Zed Books, 224pp, £16.99

It is always refreshing to read a book that turns an issue on its head. Laura María Agustín's trenchant and controversial critique of the anti-trafficking crusade goes a step further: it lays out the matter - in this case, "human trafficking" - on the operating table, dissects it, unravels its innards, and shows the reader, in gory, sometimes eye-watering detail, why everything we think about it is Wrong with a capital W. It's a jarring read; I imagine that those who make a living from campaigning against the scourge of human trafficking will throw it violently across the room, if not into an incinerator. Yet it may also be one of the most important books on migration published in recent years.

Most of us recognise the ideological under pinnings of old-style baiting of migrants. When newspaper hacks or populist politicians talk about evil Johnny Foreigners coming here and stealing our jobs or eating our swans, it does not take much effort to sniff out their xenophobic leanings. Agustín's contention is that the new "discourse" on migrants (in which many of them, especially the women and children, are seen as "victims of trafficking" in need of rescue) is also built on ideological foundations. Like its demented cousin - tabloid hysteria about foreign scroungers - the trafficking scare is based on a deeply patronising view of migrants, rather than any hard statistical evidence that human trafficking is rife.

Agustín begins by challenging the idea that there is a "new slave trade" in which hundreds of thousands of women and children are sold like chattels across borders. The US state department claims that between 600,000 and 800,000 people are trafficked for forced labour or sex worldwide every year; Unicef says a million children and young people are trafficked each year. Upmarket newspapers - which have embraced the seemingly PC "trafficking discourse" with the same fervour as the tabloid newspapers screech about fence-leaping job-stealers from Sangatte - tell us that "thousands" of women and children have been trafficked into Britain and "traded for tawdry sex", and that some of them (the African ones) "live under fear of voodoo".

Agustín says the numbers are "mostly fantasies". She does not doubt that there are instances of forced migration, or that, in a world where freedom of movement is restricted by stiff laws and stringent border controls, many aspiring migrants have little choice but to seek assistance from dodgy middlemen. Yet, having researched trafficking and sex workers' experiences for the past five years, both academically and through fieldwork in Latin America and Asia, she concludes that the figures are based on "sweeping generalisations" and frequently on "wild speculation". "Most of the writing and activism [on trafficking] does not seem to be based on empirical research, even when produced by academics," she notes. Many of the authors rely on "media reports" and "statistics published with little explanation of methodology or clarity about definitions".

Agustín points out that some anti-trafficking activists depend on numbers produced by the CIA (not normally considered a reliable or neutral font of information when it comes to inter national issues), even though the CIA refuses to "divulge its research methods". The reason why the "new slavery" statistics are so high is, in part, that the category of trafficking is promiscuously defined, sometimes disingenuously so. Some researchers automatically label migrant women who work as prostitutes "trafficked persons", basing their rationale on the notion that no woman could seriously want to work in the sex industry. The Coalition Against Trafficking in Women argues that "all children and the majority of women in the sex trade" should be considered "victims of trafficking". As Agustín says, such an approach "infantilises" migrant women, "eliminating any notion that women who sell sex can consent". Ironically, it objectifies them, treating them as unthinking things that are moved around the world against their will.

The reality is very different, the author says. Most migrant women, including those who end up in the sex industry, have made a clear decision to leave home and take their chances overseas. They are not "passive victims" who must be "saved" by anti-trafficking campaigners and returned to their country of origin. Rather, frequently, they are headstrong and ambitious women who migrate in order to escape "small-town prejudices, dead-end jobs, dangerous streets and suffocating families". Shocking as it might seem to the feminist social workers, caring police people and campaigning journalists who make up what Agustín refers to as the "rescue industry", she has discovered that some poor migrant women "like the idea of being found beautiful or exotic abroad, exciting desire in others". I told you it was controversial.

One of Agustín's chief concerns is that the anti-trafficking crusade is restricting international freedom of movement. What presents itself as a campaign to protect migrants from harm is actually making their efforts to flee home, to find work, to make the most of their lives in often difficult and unforgiving circumstances, that much harder. She writes about the "rescue raids" carried out by police and non-governmental organisations, in which even women who vociferously deny having been trafficked may be arrested, imprisoned in detention centres and sent back home - for the benefit of their own mental stability, of course. It used to be called repatriation; now, dolled up in therapeutic lingo, it is called "rescue".

For all its poisonous prejudices, the old racist view of migrants as portents of crime and social instability at least treated them as autonomous, sentient, albeit "morally depraved", adults. By contrast, as the author illustrates, the anti-trafficking lobby robs migrants of agency and their individual differences, and views them as a helpless, swaying mass of thousands who must be saved by the more savvy and intelligent women of the west and by western authorities.

Agustín reserves her most cutting comments for the flourishing "rescue industry", arguing convincingly that it is driven by a colonial-style, maternalistic attitude to foreign women. In its world, "victims become passive receptacles and mute sufferers who must be saved, and helpers become saviours - a colonialist operation". Bitingly, she compares today's anti-trafficking feminists with the "bourgeois women" of the 19th century who considered it a moral virtue to save poor prostitutes, who were "mistaken, misled, deviant". Like them, anti-trafficking crusaders see women as weak, easily victimised, and in need of guidance from a caring chaperone.

In truth, poor women - and men and children - migrate for many different reasons and have many different experiences, some good, some bad, some tragic. Such migrants are wise and wily, says Agustín; they have gumption, ambition and hope; they are often cosmopolitan, too, working, mixing and having flings with migrants from the other side of the world whom they meet in some big city in Europe or the United States. And many of them have far more liberal attitudes to freedom of movement than the westerners who campaign on their behalf. She quotes a Kurdish migrant to the Netherlands who thinks borders should be abolished: "I don't come from the sun or moon. I'm from earth just like everybody else and the earth belongs to all of us." Now that's an argument I can get behind.

Brendan O'Neill is the editor of "spiked" (www.spiked-online.com)

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45 comments from readers

BegbiesEvilTwin
28 March 2008 at 18:09

Brendan, it's a genuinely engaging article but can you explain what you find refreshing about it?

The reason for the query is that your characterisation of the book says nothing new that that hasn’t been widely discussed in the past 10-20 years.

Amanita
28 March 2008 at 20:40

Brendan's reference to "those who make a living from campaigning against the scourge of human trafficking " should have included the most-published campaigners on this subject - those like Laura Agostin who make a living from denying the reality of human trafficking. She does vountarily what prostituted women are compelled to do - tell men the lies they want to hear.

It is hardly news that poverty is a big push factor in making women available for "survival sex" , domestic or trafficked in global trade. Agustin's ploy is to transform decisions made under coercive conditions into farsighted career decisions. Her argument that anti-trafficking laws deprive women victims of "agency" accepts without irony Anatole France's observation that "The law, in its majestic equality, forbids rich and poor alike to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal their bread."

Or, as Alexander Pope twittered, "See the blind beggar dance."

How refreshing it must be to be above all that tiresome reality of trafficking's force, fraud and coercion .

esther hertzog
29 March 2008 at 07:19

Indeed, there is nothing new about Agostin's findings and anlysis (as suggested by the other readres' comments). The manipulation of statistics for the benefit of "benevolent" governmental and public organizations, in the contexts of battered women, children at risk, drunken drivers etc., has been noticed long ago in sociological research.

Also, the "rescue industy" phenomenon is not a novelty, in a world that commercializes everything.

The social change that is needed in our contemporary world is so vast that it is very tempting to minimize its horrors.

radius
29 March 2008 at 23:18

the poverty of liberalism really knows no bounds of decency....makes you wonder what makes some men tick

Trent
30 March 2008 at 10:28

Indeed, some women will voluntarily enter the international prostitution racket to escape their home, country, society, lifestyle. But I dare-say it is a mere fraction of those who are actually forced into the practice.

migrationresearch
30 March 2008 at 15:55

Agustín's analysis of trafficking is important and documents the nuances that so many want to deny about the wide range of women´s experiences in migratory sex work. What is really important is that she clearly shows that women often vulnerable to trafficking harm not just because of their poverty or organised crime but because migration policy compel them to resort to irregular migration. Furthermore she also shows how many women in trafficking do exercise agency and are the authors of their own solutions to the harm inflicted on them as they transit to lives outside of trafficking.

Agustín does not deny the experiences of those who experience harm in prostitution or trafficking, in fact she offers ways of listening to how women who have experienced a wide range of harms and have refused to accept such victimisation and have fought back. Hearing how sex workers and others have overcome trafficking and the political structures that sustain trafficking is important in properly understanding how to enable migrant women to protect themselves from exploitation.

BegbiesEvilTwin
30 March 2008 at 22:32

migrationresearch: Interesting.

ccinthecity
31 March 2008 at 14:18

When I started college 40 years ago, feminists campaigned to have women regarded as valuable human beings and not sex objects - THAT is the only thing that's been turned "on its head." There's a word for the position taken by women like Ms. Agustin, it's betrayal.

BegbiesEvilTwin
31 March 2008 at 14:50

In interested in where these issues are currently at, hence why I made the original query to O'Neill.

Can you give me an idea of the sorts of women you consider betray women? What do you think your generation have to say to younger women? Do you have any ideas why women's studies is virtually dead as a topic at undergrad level?

cynwolfe
31 March 2008 at 18:43

I used to think that a woman had a right to choose to sell her body, and given that prostitution would occur regardless of the law, it would be better to legalize it. If it were legal, I reasoned, it could be regulated in the interest of public health. A cab driver requires a license, in the interest of protecting the public from danger, so a prostitute’s license would require regular physical exams to control the spread of STDs and HIV. The women themselves would benefit because they didn’t exist in some shadow world beyond the law, and could practice their trade with greater personal safety. I now find that reasoning faulty, in large part (ironically) because of reading Brendan O’Neill and his fellow spiked writers.

Morally, it’s nobody’s business if money is exchanged in connection with sexual favors; should the state then be involved in regulating it?

But more to the point, the issue is neither moral nor narrowly legal. It’s constitutional in the broadest sense of guaranteeing rights, and cannot be addressed on grounds of practicality, such as protecting vulnerable immigrants or providing a needed service. The issue is not mere autonomy (the woman’s right to choose to do as she will), but liberty. The opposite of liberty is slavery, which is the buying and selling of a human being. “We” don’t permit a person to sell himself into slavery, even if he would choose to do so to benefit his family financially, because it negates the liberty that defines us as human beings. But look: some slaves in the 19th-century American South or in ancient Rome lived relatively well; some (Cicero’s Tiro comes to mind) were measurably better off than a “free” person living in poverty and squalor. This is a realistic and important historical perspective, but it does not legitimate or mitigate slavery as an institution. I cannot imagine anyone who defends the concept of liberty accepting the “better off” argument. And no matter how you dress it up or how much money is exchanged, prostitution is temporary slavery. It is the buying and selling of a body for use as an instrument or object.

From a moral and libidinous perspective, I can entertain the thought of paying a willing person for sex, and I admit there’s a fine line between paying cash and exchanging other kinds of favors. I also say that prostitution, like any other private sexual act, is not inherently shameful or immoral. Why then would I not want to see my daughter advertised on the Emperor’s Club website, even if prostitution were legal? And is there any other legal job earning, say, $500 an hour to which I would object? Does the amount of money earned (and the glossy context) matter? $50, not; $500, go for it? No. Why? The only answer I could arrive at was the above: that by definition prostitution abnegates the individual’s liberty and renders her less than a full and free human being.

Patrick
31 March 2008 at 20:09

Cynwolfe presents all of the relevant info except for one important consideration. That is, is there anything

worse than prostitution? If there is then prostitution

has to be a step up, perhaps from mysery that is inconceivanble to me and maybe to you.

Patrick
31 March 2008 at 20:10

Cynwolfe presents all of the relevant info except for one important consideration. That is, is there anything

worse than prostitution? If there is then prostitution

has to be a step up, perhaps from misery that is inconceivanble to me and maybe to you.

Al_Frick
31 March 2008 at 21:12

Another hores_hit book written by a liberal, leftie nut who hates paternalistic gov'ts rescuing women. She is willing to cut off her nose (let these poor women get raped and suffer) to spite her face (to advance women's "freedom.").

Let me ask a simple question? How do crimes occur? When one party is in a position of superior power over another. These migrant women are powerless - and weakness and vulnerability are magnets to crime. Pimps see them as a way to make a quick buck. Johns see them as fresh meat. I've been to European countries where pimps wore fedoras with canes while standing next to Eastern European women. You're telling me that that woman is there of her own free choice?????

This author has surely condemned these women as much as if she'd sold them herself. If this book so much as influences one lawmaker, it has done its irreparable damage.

Bert Archer
01 April 2008 at 01:42

I was with you, cynwolf, till the very end.

"The only answer I could arrive at was the above: that by definition prostitution abnegates the individual’s liberty and renders her less than a full and free human being."

You ask why you would not want to see your daughter advertised on a prostitution website and because I imagine you figure yourself to be solidly liberal and right-thinking, you figure the only possible answer is that prostitution is inherently wrong. Another possibility exists: you experience, as many do, a revulsion at the idea of exchanging sex for money because you place sex in a different category from consulting or jack-hammering. This is a common notion, but by no means the QED you think of it as. Without some more convincing reason why contracting [comment removed by administrator] is substantially different from contracting to put up drywall, I'm going to conclude that you are simply, commonly, albeit slightly, puritanical.

crasch
01 April 2008 at 03:15

"The law, in its majestic equality, forbids rich and poor alike to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal their bread."

Let's grant for the moment, that many women are fleeing harsh conditions, such as poverty, oppression, and violence.

And let's grant that prostitution is an often unpleasant experience.

Yet immigrant prostitutes must perceive that prostitution in a foreign land to be better than the options available to them at home, or they would not immigrate.

Therefore, by banning prostitution, and forcibly repatriating them, aren't we condemning them, by their own lights, to a fate worse than prostitution?

qaz
01 April 2008 at 05:30

"...the old racist view of migrants as portents of crime and social instability ..."

Someone hasn't been reading the crime, poverty, and birth and marriage statistics, I see.

ramesh1
01 April 2008 at 07:58

Migrants woman for prostitutes is ancient business. You can see all over world.Russians are now take leading roll in this business.

Just visit Goa,Russians are making havoc there.Bussness of prostitute is most profitable and easy. You to invest very smal capitol.

In India Mourya Mugal period this business florished just like gold and selver.

cynwolfe
01 April 2008 at 16:13

Bert above misses my point, which is not moral, but legal: how can you arrive at a legal definition of prostitution that distinguishes it from slavery or, more precisely, indentured servitude, which like prostitution is a contract with a terminus? Is it OK to sell yourself to perform agricultural work? It isn’t about the nature of the work; it’s the surrendering of the legal status described by the high-falutin word ‘liberty.’ Contrast porn actors and prostitutes: the former display their bodies and sexuality to make a product to sell, the bodies of the latter ARE the thing bought and sold. Or pole dancers and Playboy models – they’re not selling their bodies, they’re selling images and performances. The legal system is based not on simple autonomy or ‘choice’ or even free will, but on a concept of the individual’s liberty.

As both reviewer and book and some comments point out, young women can and do make informed choices to enter the sex industry, and young immigrant women in particular may be choosing to leave conditions that are far worse. I would certainly not be among the zealous crusaders forcing them to go back. But while the “better off” argument is seductively rational, it still comes down to the lesser of two evils. There are very few women who would choose prostitution if they had another way to earn the same money for the same amount of work-hours, or in the case of immigrant women, to enter the country and obtain work by other means. The problem with focussing on the sensational topic of “sex trafficking” is that our attitudes toward sex divert us from the real issue, which is immigration policy and how it contributes to creating a class of people with ambiguous legal status.

doxy100
02 April 2008 at 04:03

Surely many have missed a vital point and are arguing about symptoms and not the cause: if conditions in the country of origin were improved many women or men would not want or need to migrate. Hence, if 'we' send 200,000 mostly male soldiers to liberate and improve conditions in a country, we would seem to be doing precisely the opposite of what is required. If, however, we took the $3 billion a month required to keep the soldiers there and spent it directly on improving health, education, infrastructure and well being, we would attack the problerm at source.

This is where the world is screwed up. Not the maternalism of the rescue industry, but the paternalism of the financial industry.

duinoelegies
02 April 2008 at 05:09

Cynwolfe misses the point. A pole dancer is selling the use of her body to sell drinks and the porn star is selling the use of his body to produce a film. The owners of the film company or the strip club are selling the images produced.

In that same way, Walmart is selling products, but the stockers, greeters, cashiers, etc., are selling their bodies' labor. One may be standing on sore feet saying "Welcome to Walmart..." while the other is on her back flattering lonely men, but both are laborers selling their bodies.

I began to think this way when a friend who happened to be a stripper considered quitting sexwork. She asked me to get her an interview at my job, which I did. By the time she got to the interview, she had considered the wage and the full-time hours and could not imagine working so long for so little. That is, she could not imagine trading places with me.

Ever since I've been sceptical of claims that sexworkers are oppressed.

sahilvaughan
02 April 2008 at 11:15

The premise of the entire article and book seems to be that there are not as many traffiked people as is commonly understood. So, how many, in her estimate is there?

Surely whatever the figure, it remains disturbing and upsetting.

The problem can at best be of a smaller scale, but it is of equal outrage and needs tackling.

subshank
02 April 2008 at 15:44

When or at what point do you consider a migrant reaches distitution and needs to be redeemed. In the first place none of the migraions are forced or thrusted upon.Exceptions are situations like Dardur or other political and ethnic cleansing events which are detestable but sneak into history. Wars and victories territorial and cultural have resulted in the past with forced migrations or exodus by choice.In these times as the author rightly depicts it has bcome fashionableto be a modern day Robinhood and rescue is a great opportunity to add feathers to the cap.In fact many immigrants desperately and deliberately choose to move to fairer opportunities taking risks like language,culture,educations,financial security and personal sefety.If some of them rather few of them statistically account for the unfortunate ,how can any generalisation be accepted.If 100 were rescued from a swea shop in one year and 120 the next, is it a 20% rise and if in another it became 50 then is it a 50% fall? what needs to be looked into is the fact that mobility is a biological trait that humans carried in their gene for eons.If reasons that promp them are various they are egged on and nothing else.

UrbanOspreys
02 April 2008 at 22:57

I’ve seen prostitutes at work in Ukraine, and I’d certainly prefer to work in one of the richer, liberal and caring EU countries. I’d move like a shot. I’ve always suspected a) the amount of men willing to have sex with a beaten, frightened girl is probably very small b) the actual logistics of keeping someone as a slave (when there are plenty of willing workers) is a bit preposterous and c) if I was an arrested prostitute I’d claim to be trafficked, or anything that aided my ability to avoid prosecution and remain in the country.

I’m not saying it doesn’t exist, or that we don’t need to do everything in our power to counter the root causes, but something about trafficking has never added up.

GJK
03 April 2008 at 06:02

There is so much fantasy wrapped around the brutal realities of forced sexual slavery that it is almost impossible to expose bare facts. The truth is we need multiple narratives not just one to expose the sad and complex layers of human misery behind prostitution, ranging from poverty, child abuse, drugs, violence and organized crime. The fact that this misery is now "industrialised" and "globalized" should not detract us from the stark truth that today millions of our fellow human beings have nothing to give or to sell except themselves. This I would argue is the real obscenity and what should concern us most.

BegbiesEvilTwin
03 April 2008 at 15:45

Being criminal industries getting good research is a challenge but an absolute necessity. Anything less is merely pissing in the wind.

JimmyJames
04 April 2008 at 23:54

ccinthecity

"31 March 2008 at 14:18

When I started college 40 years ago, feminists campaigned to have women regarded as valuable human beings and not sex objects -"

But equally men can be sex objects. To pretend otherwise is absurd. Feminists should focus on human rights and human dignity for women. Equally a woman has the right to become a sex worker if she chooses to. Yes poverty plays a factor. And yes some poor women might think its cool to go abroad and be thought of as exotic and desirable. Who doesn't want to feel desirable? But poverty will not be eradicated overnight. There is no statistic that the majority of sex workers are forced. But many are. There are those who are tricked into it, to places like Bosnia, Kosovo, Turkey, Israel, Greece, UAE. [Comment removed by administrator] What are feminists doing about women who are being exploited?

HatTrick
06 April 2008 at 11:45

I am unable to really see the point of the book, is Agustin is trying to make something good out of something bad. So what if the extent of human trafficking is a myth? The real problem is that women. although making the choice, see the only way out of their poverty is prostitution. Is Agustin trying to make prostitution a representation of female empowerment?

tomasrome
06 April 2008 at 13:43

This is an example of moral inversion, widespread today. [Comment removed by administrator]

Far from exposing racism, this article exposes the self-hating souls of too many Westerners [comment removed by administrator] who instantly fall for the pro-mass immigration argument, yet they sympathize immediately with Tibetians who argue against Chinese immigration, or with Arabs denouncing Western cultural influence at the same time they murder indigenous Christians and Jews, and plot economic and physical terror against the West.

The only people who want unrestricted immigration are those who lust for their neighbor's possessions, and wish to avoid the hard work to help uplift their culture so it can proudly have similiar possessions of its own.

BegbiesEvilTwin
06 April 2008 at 18:57

tomasrome: Presumably you haven't came across his political contingent. One of the groups staple tactics is to champion an issue that is seemingly counterintuitive* to the mainstream. Then they exploit it to both raise their groups profile while at the same time sticking two fingers up at the liberal-left while proudly moralising that they have some monopoly to the truth. The only problem being is they merely drive themselves further into the neoliberal right while somehow continuing to claim themselves as Libertarian Marxist.

*Except for abortion which seems to be a no-go topic. The wife of their ideological guru is the boss of BPAS who takes a conventional approach to things. Nobody seems to have the balls to take similar lines of attack with her.

tomasrome
07 April 2008 at 01:13

BegbiesEvilTwin: Are you talking about Brenden ONeill, since you say "his" political contingent, and Laura Agustin is presumably a female?

You are correct in that I don't know much about these manipulative tactics. I'm American, and I see this is a British journal, so maybe I'm unfamiliar here. What group specifically are you referring to, and can you provide a hyperlink?

BegbiesEvilTwin
07 April 2008 at 02:49

tomasrome: Apologies, it's Brendan's posse (spiked online) I was referring to. I don't know anything on Laura Augustin.

Links on Spiked:-

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiked_(magazine)

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Spiked_Online

FTR: IMHO there is an absolute need for different groups to flag up and discuss challenging and controversial issues -and- as I said on my very first post on this thread this is a genuinely engaging article. He definitely deserves credit for that.

As for manipulation, perhaps every so often people should pull off pranks to raise an important issue. Think about how Peter Tatchell attempted a citizen's arrest on Robert Mugabe. That was eye-bogglingly amazing. That stunt raised the problem of Mugabe directly to every person's living room.

I wish I could say I would do similar but truth is I don't think I have the courage to do what he did.

However if you would like to read another great book review from one of the staple NS journos, try the link below:

The battle at Islam's heart

by Ziauddin Sardar

http://www.newstatesman.com/200711010047

Kamakshib
07 April 2008 at 05:37

haven't read the book. if i were to attempt that activity, i would probably throw it across the room.

people sell kidneys--also by choice; people sail in tugboats across oceans and end up in camps along europe's borders--also by choice; parents sell children for the price of a meal in villages in india--choice again; people kill girl babies--by choice.

the poor have choices that readers of this page do not have.

i am saddened and frightened by such research findings...

John Jameson
07 April 2008 at 12:25

Cynwolfe states: "prostitution is temporary slavery. It is the buying and selling of a body for use as an instrument or object."

Well, I have been to a prostitute once in a while, and that is not how it actually works. She will only agree to do a limited range of sex acts or just a single one. And she will usually charge extra for some acts which are normal for a happily married couple. In fact, you do not pay for using a body, but for having a good time, which hopefully includes a friendly chat and an inviting atmosphere.

Nowadays, johns have their own consumer websites, and they will write glowing reviews about pros who appear to enjoy their work. Indeed, there is a promising pilot project here in the Netherlands where men who visit prostitutes are invented to report suspicious circumstances to the police anonymously.

Whether a prostitute says she is forced or whether she says she works voluntarily, she has powerful incentives to lie or to fool herself, one way or the other.

What is an honest john to do? (Trust me, never being treated as a sex object is not as joyful as you imagine.)

I will look for women who are old enough to really make an informed choice (25+) and who have a reputation for enjoying sex. One of my favourites happens to be an immigrant from Eastern Europe.

John Jameson
07 April 2008 at 14:07

"invented to report"

I meant "invited to report", of course.

Nonikin
07 April 2008 at 18:02

I am part of the "rescue industry" which Agustín so dispises but her characterisation of those who campaign against trafficking reveals a distinct lack of nuance. I'm increaingly suspicious of her credicials as a researcher due to the ommission of the involvement of faith-basd organisatons in anti-trafficking campaigning. By tarring us all with the same brush as patronising and condescending, ignores entirely the huge amount of work done by human rights organisations, anti-slavery orgs and women's groups founded on the principle of empowerment. There does exist the dodgy puritanical zeal of the faith-based orgs, the hero-style rescue missions of the law enforcement agencies, but there is a huge amount of tension between these groups and their approaches to women being sexually exploited.

Anyone with even limited dealings in this issue is aware of these tensions which makes me surpried and suspicious of their ommission. Maybe it is easy to characterise us all as limp-wristed liberals, but to characterise us as stupid and blind to the fact that women migrate for sex work is offensive and naive.

I am also puzzled by the insinuation that those who campaign against trafficking are anti-immigration. Puzzled because we are often accused by the right-wing of "just wanting to let them all in" because we actively stop deportations and provide vital care and services to victims of trafficking.

What this book and many of the comments fail to address is the gendered nature of this issue. Yes, there are male prostitutes and lesbian prostitutes but the vast majority are women being used by men. Why? Why is prostitution always a viable occupation for women, sometimes their only alternative? Why is it expected that poor migrant women will end up as prostitutes in rich Western countries? There are many and complex answers, but at root it is about female oppression.

I have not patronised the women I have dealt with who have been trafficked into prostitution in this country, I have been humbled by them. But that does not make me any less sickened by the ideology that got them here, that exploited them and that made them victims. And I have no problem calling them victims, yes many become survivors but some don't. But it demonstrates that there perpetrators and there are criminals.

Agustín's contribution many be cutely controversial, but I have no doubt that it will be quoted back at me by right-wing bigots. Progress?

John Jameson
07 April 2008 at 22:33

Nonikin, this right-wing bigot understands you are angry about having your integrity questioned. That was uncalled for. But female oppression - do you mean oppression by women? Sex work is the only sector where people pay a professional's rates for unskilled labour, even though it is hardly a unionized sector. Calling this 'men using women', that is a rather ideological statement. Who is exploiting who here?

You're quite right that prostitution is a career choice which is generally denied to men. It's the oldest profession because men are more interested in casual sex than women. No amount of dogoodery, condemnation or criminalization is going to change that. As the war on drugs shows, you can't legislate the law of supply and demand.

tomasrome
08 April 2008 at 11:58

BegbiesEvilTwin : Thanks for the links. Knowing that the article may come from the point of view of a psychotic manipulative deviant of some freakish rightwing Marxist variety puts it in the right context.

gordy
10 April 2008 at 04:55

I think that Agustin is indulging in a few 'generalisations' herself. Most reasonable people are not against immigration per se, after all we all came from somewhere else at some period in history. Rather we'd just like to see it better controlled to keep out the riff-raff and undesirables.

And to advocate getting rid of borders is just plain lunacy. How else do we control immigration? Luckily we don't vote for people with such unrealistic attitudes...YET!!!

BegbiesEvilTwin
11 April 2008 at 00:14

tomasrome: My pleasure.

Nonkin: Only a complete idiot would fail to realise that gender hangs in every single word of the article and subsequent comments.

If you sincerely want to make an impact on both prostitution and trafficking your best bet would be to deal with the illegal drugs industry. The UK's botched attempts to deal with Helmand's opium crop are more likely to boost prostitution and trafficking than anything else. And it can be done quickly*.

Please move on to the noughties. The situation moved on a long time ago.

*We can use the Afghan opium opium to turn into morphine as the Senlis Institute suggests. The West as we have a shortage. The surplus morphine can be sent to developing countries who can't afford it for palliative care.

Shell79
12 April 2008 at 12:45

Oh Dear listen to the wailing and ridiculous contortions of rationality from those who still insist on portraying all women as victims of mens lusts. Victims who cannot possibly choose to be sex workers, because no sane woman would choose that. Because you do not like or understand their choices, you will lie and exaggerate and mislead - even yourselves, to prevent them having that choice.

Speaking as a woman and a feminist who has friends who are active prostitutes, I'm appalled at the numbers of so-called feminists who take on board the Dworkin-Mckinnon world view without any critical thought of any kind. It is, in large part, poisonous nonsense and far more damaging to women than all the imagined sex slavery so far conceived.

Why are women so keen to believe this foolishness? Because we all (men and women) love to claim we are the victims of injustice and are willing to deny facts, claim black is white and that the sun rises in the west just to cling on to this cherished victim status. That way all our troubles and inadequacies can be blamed on something outside ourselves, in this case; the LUSTS OF MEN.

Of course women have the right to have sex for whatever reasons they choose, including for money, security, love, companionship or just fun, just like men do, whether others like it or not. Those who claim to be feminists and bend logic over backwards to say these women are not able to make adult decisions are worse than the imagined oppressors they claim so shrilly to be fighting.

As for the dumb argument that every woman has the right to choose "my body-my choice" - except that selling your body is slavery and so this must be wrong. Goddess give me strength. Slavery is being owned by another, not choosing to engage in an activity with another for money. In each and every argument presented here against this article, there is the ASSUMPTION that women cannot freely choose to have sex for money. This glaringly dumb, and completely unjust, idea is the basis for almost all the mad repressive statements made by the permanently outraged 'freedom fighters'.

Instead of telling adult women that they are wrong when they say they know what they are doing, instead of telling them that they cannot make choices you do not understand, try turning your attention to forced marriages and helping those who really do not want to be sex workers, rather than living this fantasy of moral superiority.

The real 'traitors' are those who will not listen to women who make choices they don't understand. This argument is just another case of the freedom fighter becoming the new oppressor.

As a woman and a feminist, I have never been more depressed by the lack of critical thought. It seems Dworking-Mckinnon have become the new religion and any doubting of the word is immediately denounced as blasphemy.

To all women, I have one plea; sisters, grow up.

SteveMD
12 April 2008 at 13:47

It is clear that the reported numbers of trafficked women have been vastly over-stated for some time now. The media seem happy to go along with this and politicians can use it to bring in ever more repressive laws.

The proposed law to make the buying of sexual services illegal is just one of these. The argument goes that if women did not work as prostitutes there would be no trafficked women and if men did not seek the services of prostitutes there would be no prostitutes. So simply stop men form buying sex and the problem is solved.

Firstly we have not defined the 'problem'. Yes, we all agree there have been cases of trafficked women, but no where near the number suggested and certainly not enough to infringe on the basic right of all consenting adults to have sex for whatever reasons they choose.

There most definitely is an industry based on exaggerating the problem of trafficked women. Many organisations depend on the the perceived size of such problems for their funding, power and influence. The madness of the situation is that those who provide the funding tend to believe the estimates of these obviously vested interests.

As for the wider situation, I fail to see how perpetuating these lies helps anyone other than those agencies, in fact it must actually divert funds which would be better spent on actively helping women who are in difficult situations they want to get out of.

gbruno
22 April 2008 at 00:03

There now a recognised type of client in Bangkok, the 'rescuer' who gives a woman $100, say, to go back to her village. The rescuer gets a good feeling. The woman gets the next bus back to Town. Earns her next $100 in a few nights.

Aussie filmmaker Dennis O'Rourke's "good Woman of BAngkok" wasnt quite like that, but he recounted the story of a scene of the woman complaining about being told to pose. This was seen by critics as evil exploitation. D O'R replied that this was the 3rd take, it was a movie. I seem to recall that he gave her rather more than $100 to 'go back to the village' but she didnt stick.

eyrie
29 April 2008 at 13:48

Thank you Shell79, here's another feminist who agrees entirely with you re this wierd and damaging religion being made out of Dworkin/McKinnon's ideas, unfortunately followed by most of the NGO/official rescue industry. While of course rape and other violence facilitated by the power imbalance between men and women (or rich and poor; or white and black...or 'native' and 'migrant') need to be addressed, equating selling sex with violence neither helps women who are actually facing violence nor supports people struggling for better conditions where they are sell sex, or who might be trying to do something else as well. It is idotic to think that Agustin is defending exploitation by talking about women's 'agency' in making choices, even if it might involve the best of a bad lot.

A major point in Agustin's book which has been missed so far here is the fact that the whole mainstream debate about 'trafficking' has concentrated on sex workers while ignoring migrants engaged in domestic and manual labour, 'trafficked' or not, who often face far harsher living conditions and worse pay. Does the rescue industry think this is ok, although often migrants in these jobs are also vulnerable to rape and other violence?

This is an important book, and should be required reading for everyone involved in any way with migration, work, and gender issues.

notyetcowed
01 May 2008 at 03:31

The thing that strikes me most about the pro-NGO crowd is how easily they've seemed to have bought into values and ways of seeing (i.e. dualities) which make and perpetuate war. Like so many foreigners being utilized as tools by states, these would-be "do gooders" have either internalised the values of perpetual war mindset (and so don't even question the basic premise that such a duality is legitimate at its authoritarian foundations), or seem to be as naive as most every other Westerner going to abroad to make the world a better place for colonization as usual! Gee, I wish they'd listen to traditional indigenous people's wisdom more!

Trafficking
12 May 2008 at 00:40

The books Autor must be blind not to see or sense what happens within slavery. I hav experienced trafficking and when i read such, i just realise how much work anti-trafficking Activist has to do. Clear migrant migrate through these means for various reasons but the conditions some end up in when they get to the west is nothing but Slavery. Why the hell should an anti-trafficking activist not live form it if they can. The better, so that they only concentrate on thier jobs, and you, hopfully not planning to live from your job one day. Agustin, if you have kids, do not pray that they get into the hands of traffickers. Then your next book will be "Trafficking is murder".

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