
WEIGHT: 49 kg
Bust: B
One HOUR:60$
NIGHT: +30$
Sex services: For family couples, Cunnilingus, Golden shower (in), Oral, Female Ejaculation
To browse Academia. Methodological obstacles limit most estimates of trafficking among sex workers in the United States. The diversity of activities and interactions in the erotic labor market ELM demand an empirical approach more nuanced than what has been utilized in much of the previous research on this topic.
We address this area of the literature with results from a first of its kind quantitative study on trafficking in the ELM. This community-based participatory research utilized a web survey to collect anonymous responses from over 1, individuals engaged in the ELM workers, managers, support staff, and clients on their experiences with trafficking. We provide evidence that those engaged in all sectors of the ELM may be important in the identification of trafficked individuals.
Policies that criminalize commercial sex discourage reporting trafficked individuals and should be reconsidered. No Annales de Bretagne et des pays de l'Ouest, International Journal of Infrared and Millimeter Waves, Log in with Facebook Log in with Google.
Remember me on this computer. Enter the email address you signed up with and we'll email you a reset link. Need an account? Click here to sign up. Sex-trafficking; sex work; client; erotic labor market; community-based participatory research; commercial sex; sex worker The erotic labor market ELM in the United States is composed of transactions involving the exchange of financial goods and services for erotic labor of varying legality and cultural acceptance.
As with other specialized labor markets, some workers are vulnerable to violence, exploitation, and trafficking. This likely varies by type and sector of sex work, suggesting considerable heterogeneity in sex worker experiences. We begin by reviewing the scholarship on sex trafficking and focus our attention on three aspects of this literature: 1 critique of the methods used in previous research for their role in characterizing trafficking as ubiquitous to the ELM; 2 findings from prior research on exploitation, violence, and victimization in sectors of the ELM; and 3 how the criminalization of sex work hinders efforts to conduct high-quality research on trafficking.