Europe Reconsiders Prostitution as Sex Trafficking
In fact, many European countries have legalized some form of prostitution. S
According to Sabine Ripperger in “Europe Reconsiders Prostitution as Sex Trafficking Booms,” advocates like Birgit Thoma are concerned that 700,000 women are trafficked to
On a global scale, women and girls, the main victims of trafficking, often are drawn into prostitution because of economic necessity, age, chemical dependency, lack of a support structure in the new country, false promises about employment, lack of immigration status, among other factors. Many countries, like those mentioned in the article, “Europe Reconsiders Prostitution as Sex Trafficking Booms,” see legal reform as a way to address sex trafficking.
For a report on the efficacy of laws to address human sex trafficking in the U.S, specifically in Minnesota, please see a new report released by the Advocates for Human Rights in September 2008 entitled Sex Trafficking Needs Assessment for the State of Minnesota. The report discusses the roles various actors play in creating and combating the problem of sex trafficking, including attorneys, judges, prosecutors, immigration officials, law enforcement officials, health care providers, facilities and social services.
Compiled from: Ripperger, Sabine, “Europe Reconsiders Prostitution as Sex Trafficking Booms,” in Deutsche Welle, 28 April 2008; Sex Trafficking Needs Assessment for the State of
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For more information, please see the Trafficking in Women and Legislation on Prostitution / Commerical Sex Work sections of this website.
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