Authors: Kevin Bales,Ron. Soodalter
Tags: #University of California Press
situation worse.” This side tends to include “conservative, faith-based,
and some feminist organizations.”97 Stolz numbers among their mem-
bers such organizations as Protection Project, CATW, Equality Now,
the National Organization for Women (NOW), and the Planned
Parenthood Federation of America.98 To this group is often added the
Salvation Army.
One of the foremost spokespersons of this group is Dorchen
Leidholdt. Leidholdt, who serves as director of the New York–based
Center for Battered Women’s Legal Services at the Sanctuary for Families
in New York City, has a long history of working within the antipornog-
raphy and anti–sex trafficking movements. An attorney who has taken
her beliefs into the courtroom, she teaches a seminar at Columbia
University Law School on domestic violence and the law. She is also a
co-founder and co-executive director of CATW. Leidholdt is a well-
spoken woman who is not shy about voicing her beliefs: “We think the
legalization of prostitution really creates a huge market for sex traffick-
ing. It just confers on pimps and brothel owners the status of respectable
businesspeople. It’s the way governments put out the welcome mat for
human traffickers.” To Leidholdt and her colleagues, the model recently
adopted by Sweden would work best for America.99 This would result in
“decriminalizing all the people who are being prostituted, . . . stepping
up services, including health care, . . . developing and implementing
strong laws against traffickers, including brothel owners and pimps, and
holding buyers accountable through low-level criminal sanctions—and
for repeat offenders, jail.”100
Norma Ramos, co-founder and co-executive director of CATW, takes
exception to the claim that the antiprostitution group excludes other
forms of trafficking from their agenda. She defines their mission as the
effort “to raise international awareness around all forms of human traf-
ficking and to create an international culture that is hostile to human
trafficking. But,” she acknowledges, “given the fact that 80 percent of
those who are trafficked are women and girls, and 70 percent of these
end up as victims of sexual exploitation, that’s our major focus.”101
On the other side of the battle line, a “cluster of diverse individuals
and groups—human rights, public health, labor, and migration—are
categorized as the ‘human trafficking sphere.’”102 This group believes in
a broad definition that does not differentiate between types of servitude
but includes all forms of sexual slavery within the overall category of
human trafficking. Their stance is that all “human trafficking is a crime
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in and of itself.” It includes “any unfree labor, including children work-
ing as camel jockeys or soldiers; or men, women, boys, and girls work-
ing in the sex industry, so long as there is evidence of force, coercion, or
deception.”103 Despite the assertions of antiprostitution groups, not
every member of this group believes in the legalization of prostitution,
but that, they argue, is beside the point. “By viewing ‘human trafficking’
as a crime, an organization’s position on the legal treatment of prostitu-
tion is irrelevant, because any forced labor, including prostitution, is
trafficking.”104 Some advocates, but not all, on this side have main-
tained that many women have few or no options for earning a living and
that if prostitution is the best of the choices available to them they
should be protected and allowed to do this “sex work.” At the same
time a handful of organizations, notably Free the Slaves and the
International Justice Mission, have taken great pains to stand outside
these two camps. This small but distinct group has often sought to act
as peacemakers in the conflict between abolitionists and the anti–human
trafficking movement.
Ann Jordan is one of the more outspoken representatives of the
anti–human trafficking movement. Jordan, formerly director of Global
Rights’ Initiative Against Trafficking in Persons, was one of the founders
of the Freedom Network, a loosely affiliated group of thirty independent
organizations of service providers and victim advocates. She was battling
trafficking long before most people knew there was a war. She points out
that, while “current federal law enables prosecutions of all enslavers and
provides protection for all victims,” the broad scope of the law “is being
eroded by a U.S. campaign that equates prostitution with trafficking,
and is redirecting resources to end prostitution rather than to end traf-
ficking.” Her concern, and that of her colleagues, is that this focus on
prostitution as the main—and to many the only—form of human traf-
ficking to warrant government attention “is affecting delivery of services
to victims.” She suggests that the investigative and prosecutorial
branches of the federal government are being diverted from their pri-
mary goals of eradicating all types of trafficking and protecting and serv-
ing the victims in order to pursue a dubious and legally questionable war
on prostitution. This approach, Jordan argues, not only denies the gov-
ernment’s protection to many victims of trafficking but is in direct con-
flict with the provisions of the Thirteenth Amendment.105 Author
DeStefano agrees and likens this “simplistic approach” of the antiprostitu-
tion movement to “the way Prohibitionists advanced a ban on alcoholic
beverages as a way to cure social ills. . . . The Bush administration believed
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that eradicating prostitution would stop the evil of sex trafficking—
though it would have no effect on other forms of trafficking.”106
Of the two factions, the antiprostitution faction is by far the more
vocal, and its influence on the legislative process—through both its con-
tinued lobbying presence and the alignment of certain conservative con-
gressmen and religious leaders with its issues—has been strongly felt.
Clearly, the shift in grant funding shows that the federal government is
collaborating with an antitrafficking program that heavily emphasizes
the issue of sex trafficking, to the detriment of labor trafficking efforts.
“Changes in the 2003 and 2005 TVPA,” writes Barbara Stolz, “as well
as the later trafficking hearings to focus on aspects of trafficking for sex,
would seem to suggest that Congress has paid greater attention to the
reassurance of and conferring of deference on the ‘anti-prostitution
sphere.’”107 The 2003 reauthorization of the TVPA included a clause—
Section 7—“which required organizations to state that they do not ‘pro-
mote, support or advocate the legalization or practice of prostitution’ in
order to receive funding.”108 Many NGOs and human rights groups “were
worried that they might have to answer a U.S. demand for a prostitution
policy even if they did not work on the subject.”109 The political stance
of the Bush administration fell into line with the antiprostitution group
in stressing sex trafficking over other forms of modern-day slavery. As
DeStefano writes
,
“The government’s emphasis on sex cases obscures
the fact that labor cases may be just as rampant, and its continued
focus on sex trafficking and the abolition of prostitution has become
divisive.”110
Ann Jordan sees this “gag rule” imposed by the 2003 and 2005 reau-
thorizations as standing in direct conflict with the First Amendment’s
right to freedom of speech.111 So frightened are many of the NGOs and
universities, she states, that they have compromised their services, prac-
tices, and policy positions so as not to give HHS an excuse to reduce or
remove their funding.112 A number of organizations “have purged pro-
hibited words such as ‘sex work’ . . . from their materials and websites
because they know that U.S. officials are scanning websites in search of
prohibited words, alleged by U.S. officials to be evidence of ‘promoting’
prostitution.”113 There is a pervasive sense among many service
providers in the anti–human trafficking movement that “Big Brother is
watching.” As Florrie Burke, human trafficking consultant and former
director of international programs at the NGO Safe Horizon, points
out, “Just because we’re looking at sex trafficking as a crime doesn’t
mean we’re supporting prostitution.”114
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The controversy came to a head in 2008 over four little words. In the
process of reauthorizing and amending the TVPA, the fight over prosti-
tution and slavery focused on the words “force, fraud, and coercion,”
the criteria used to define “severe forms of trafficking in persons.” A
coalition of antiprostitution groups pressed hard to delete these words
so that all that would be needed to bring a charge of human trafficking
was that a person had performed a “commercial sex act.” Groups as
diverse as Equality Now and the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics
and Religious Liberty Commission were concerned that unless the law
was amended it would remain necessary for federal prosecutors to prove
that pimps used “force, fraud, or coercion” in order to establish that an
adult prostitution case was also trafficking. The DOJ, a number of anti-
trafficking groups, and the bill’s key sponsors in the Senate, Senators
Biden and Brownback, resisted this.
It was right that they did so. Human trafficking is the process of
delivering a person into enslavement. It is a process defined by its end
result. If a person is smuggled into the United States and then left free
to find a job, the crime is smuggling. If a person is brought here and
then held against his or her will and forced to work without pay, the
crime is human trafficking, which is to say slavery. The original drafters
of the bill made this clear; they defined the crime as including “force,
fraud, or coercion for the purpose of subjection to involuntary servi-
tude, peonage, debt bondage, or slavery.” Without these criteria any act
of prostitution becomes trafficking and thus slavery. Over the years
many groups have tried to use the word
slavery
to accentuate or dram-
atize their issue. In the 1990s one group even urged the United Nations
to name incest as a type of slavery. Low-wage workers and economic
migrants are sometimes termed slaves, but the dilution of the word
slavery
serves no one. Slavery is based in violence.
Slavery,
throughout all of
human history, has meant holding people against their will through the
threat or reality of violence, forcing them to work, and paying them
nothing beyond subsistence. To attempt to expand the definition of slav-
ery to include anyone who can walk away, who can make a choice about
his or her situation, is to rob the word of its meaning and to demean
those who have suffered in slavery over the centuries. Congress may
choose to pass a law that makes prostitution a federal crime. There are
many forms this law might take, including the Swedish model that leaves
the sale of sex as legal while making the purchase illegal. But gutting an
existing antislavery law that applies to all forms of human trafficking is
not the way to go.
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S E X S E L L S
It is not accidental that when most Americans think of human traffick-
ing they think of sex slavery. It comes, in large measure, as a direct result
of the efforts and the influence of the antiprostitution faction. The gov-
ernment has frequently made it clear that when it talks about human
trafficking it really means sex trafficking. And although there have been
cases involving servitude in homes, fields, and factories, when the gov-
ernment touts its victories, the majority are sex cases, and the subject of
labor trafficking makes scarcely a ripple.115 As stated in a 2006 article
in the Tulane University law journal, “What’s enthralled the media, the
Christian right and the Bush administration is not the demanding,
multi-layered narrative of migrants, but the damsels in distress, the inno-
cents lured across borders for the purpose of prostitution. In other
words, their concern over human trafficking has become, in practice, a
concern over what they deem sex trafficking.”116 This attitude was given
voice by John Miller, who, while serving as the Bush administration’s
director of the TIP Office, referred to trafficking in women as “the sex
pillar of slavery.”117 In 2007, this trend manifested itself in the structur-
ing of the New York State trafficking law, in which the difference
between penalties for sex trafficking (a “B” felony) as opposed to those
for labor trafficking (a “D” felony) is vast. Dorchen Leidholdt is
adamant that this was not the intent of the antiprostitution group and