http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/23/op...stitution.html
September 22, 2012
  
A Misguided Moral Crusade
  By  NOY THRUPKAEW
              BEATEN. Burned. Branded with a bar code or with a pimp’s name carved  into her thigh. Thrown into the trunk of a car for punishment. Forced to  provide sexual services for countless callous and violent men. This is  the dominant image of young people in the sex trade, and it is fueling  deeply flawed campaigns against prostitution. 
  Galvanized by public outrage and advocacy groups, policy makers have  started to push to eradicate all prostitution, not just the trafficking  of children into the sex trade. Under the catchphrase “no demand, no  supply,” they advocate increasing criminal penalties against men who buy  sex — a move they believe will upend the market that fuels prostitution  and sex trafficking. 
  These tactics have gained significant momentum, prompting an initiative by the 
National Association of Attorneys General,  law-enforcement stings and sweeps across the country, and even attempts  to prosecute clients as traffickers. The problem is that the “end  demand” campaign will harm trafficking victims and sex workers more than  it helps them. 
  In a ballroom at Boston’s upscale Westin Copley Place Hotel this spring,  more than 250 law-enforcement officers, advocates and survivors of the  sex trade, sat riveted, some openly weeping, as they watched a video of a  young woman in a dreary motel room, taking her clothes off, telling her  grim life story to one uncaring, unhearing man after another. The  videos’s final message: If men didn’t buy her, pimps couldn’t sell her. 
  For these modern-day abolitionists, ending all prostitution is the only  solution. As Lina Nealon, director of Demand Abolition, told the  gathered participants through tears, “Because of the work you are doing,  my 2-year-old daughter and my soon-to-be-born daughter will find the  idea of buying people for sex as incomprehensible as separate water  fountains are to me.” 
  End-demand advocates’ prototypical victim — an abused teenage girl  raised in the blight of the inner city and forced into the sex trade by  an older man — does exist. But they disregard the fact that individuals,  including boys, men and transgender people, enter the sex trade for a  variety of reasons. The pimped girl who has inflamed the public’s  imagination needs government services and protection, not to be made  into a symbolic figure in an ideological battle to eradicate the entire  sex industry, which, like many other sectors, includes adults laboring  in conditions ranging from upscale to exploitative, from freely chosen  to forced. 
  Unfortunately, despite their righteous anger, the end-demand crowd is  quick to dismiss what many sex workers actually have to say. Some  activists have gone so far as to brand those who criticize their  campaign as “house slaves” unable to recognize their own oppression. 
  The end-demand crusade is premised on the idea that all prostitution is  inherently exploitative. Some end-demand advocates came to their  position from their work against pornography in the 1980s; others worked  with a coalition of conservatives and evangelical Christians during  George W. Bush’s presidency to abolish prostitution. Not surprisingly,  these abolitionists ignore the legal distinctions between prostitution  and human trafficking. Federal law states that trafficking for forced  prostitution occurs only when a commercial sex act is induced through  force, fraud or coercion, or when the person induced to perform it is  under 18. Indeed, not all prostitution is trafficking, and not all  trafficking — as those exploited and sexually assaulted in homes, fields  and factories across our nation know too well — is prostitution. 
  Although it emerged out of anti-trafficking rhetoric, the end-demand  campaign is actually a movement to change prostitution policy from our  current legal framework — the criminalization of both buying and selling  sex — to the “Swedish model,” in which selling sex is not illegal, but  buying sex is a criminal offense. (Two other models exist: full  legalization with government regulation and registration of sex workers,  as in the Netherlands, and full decriminalization of both buying and  selling sex with minimal state oversight, as in New Zealand.) 
  Based on an appealing, proactive vision of gender justice, the Swedish  model has caught on in Iceland and Norway — even though it hasn’t panned  out as planned in Sweden, where street-level prostitution dropped  temporarily after the law took effect in 1999, only to climb again.  Sweden’s sex workers say they are forced to rush negotiations and have  to rely more on intermediaries to access wary clients. Prostitution  hasn’t gone away; it’s simply gone underground. 
  Translating Swedish laws into an American context presents even more  problems. America lacks the extensive services of Sweden’s social  welfare state, which are vital to anyone leaving the sex trade. And  American politicians don’t want to be seen as soft on crime or morally  lax, making it unlikely that selling sex could ever be decriminalized  here. 
  In this environment, any uptick in law-enforcement actions aimed at  buyers inevitably results in increased criminalization of those selling  sex. New York City’s “Operation Losing Proposition” earlier this year  resulted in nearly 200 arrests; the operation allegedly targeted the  demand side of prostitution, but it netted 10 individuals who sell sex  as well. Attempting to implement the Swedish law in our punitive  environment would most likely mean the criminalization of even more of  those it’s intended to help — without a Scandinavian-style safety net  for those leaving the life. 
  “You will see that in any country, when you criminalize both parts, the  police go for the women,” said Kasja Wahlberg, a Swedish detective and  the country’s rapporteur on human trafficking. According to Meagan  Morris, a Colorado researcher who has studied law-enforcement approaches  to prostitution, even so-called “victim-centered” approaches  disproportionately hurt women, leaving them more vulnerable to  trafficking and exploitation because they have criminal records, which  limit their access to affordable housing and sustainable-wage jobs. 
  End-demand strategies could also lead to more pressure on sex workers  from pimps and traffickers. “Pimps don’t accept the rationale that  there’s a new law and fewer johns now,” said Paul Holmes, a  counter-trafficking expert and former Scotland Yard official. “So if a  girl is working 16 hours, she’ll have to work 20, and under more  brutality. You’ll also drive the trade underground, which makes it more  dangerous for them and more difficult for us.” 
  However well-intentioned law-enforcement strategies might be, they have  been engineered with little attention to the wants and needs of sex  workers — and to the violence many of them have faced from government  employees. 
  A study in Illinois found that police account for 30 percent of all  reported abuse, compared with just 4 percent arising from pimps.  According to one young person cited in the 
Young Women’s Empowerment Project’s study:  “I was going to meet a new john. It turned out to be a sting set up by  the cops. He got violent with me, handcuffed me and then raped me. He  cleaned me up for the police station, and I got sentenced to four months  in jail for prostitution.” 
  In New York, a woman who was trafficked into the sex trade as a minor  told me sometimes “the cops are the ones abusing you, taking your money,  beating you up” and they offer no help “even if I get raped” by a john.  “I’ve had to provide services more than once in exchange for not being  arrested,” she added. “Who is really going to hold them accountable?” 
  THE best law-enforcement strategy to prevent trafficking into forced  prostitution is not an end-demand campaign that harms current sex  workers. What’s needed instead is a commitment to seriously investigate  and prosecute traffickers and impose harsh punishment on those who rape  and assault sex workers. Police departments also need public ombudsmen,  tough internal-affairs bureaus and vigorous monitoring to combat  corruption and abuse. If those in the sex trade felt comfortable  reporting rape to the police rather than running from them, police  departments would have a much easier time discovering cases of  trafficking.        
  But law enforcement is only one part of the solution. Many young people  living on the streets turn to “survival sex” in exchange for food or  shelter — and many do so without an intermediary. “I ran away from all  the drug activity at home at 11,” one woman in Chicago told me. “I had  to do it just to have somewhere to sleep, something to eat.” 
  Nearly 90 percent of the minors profiled in a John Jay College study  indicated they wanted to leave “the life” — but cited access to stable  housing as one of the biggest obstacles. In New York City alone, almost  4,000 homeless youths lack stable housing, yet there are barely more  than 100 long-term shelter beds to serve them. 
  Starting in 2008, staff members at the Queens County AIDS Center could  barely get the door open on cold days: the office was packed with young  people sleeping on the floor. One of them was Donna, a transgender  25-year-old who started selling sex at 13 after running away from  abusive foster and group homes.        
  For people like Donna, ending demand for prostitution is not the answer;  satisfying the demand for basic social services is. Shelter, job  opportunities and a responsive and sensitive law-enforcement system are  vital to those who want to leave the trade. “People call you a survivor  after you leave the life,” Donna told me. “But I was a survivor when I  was in it.” She added: “I didn’t really like prostituting. But then, I  had no other way out.” 
Noy Thrupkaew is a contributing editor at The American Prospect and a former fellow at the Open Society Foundations.