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The Factbook on Global Sexual Exploitation |
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About the Factbook |
Contents |
Asia
Europe
Oceania
Africa
Middle East
Central America
& the Caribbean
South America
North America |
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| About the Factbook |
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The Factbook on Global Sexual Exploitation was compiled from media,
non-governmental organization and government reports. It is an initial effort
to collect facts, statistics and known cases on global sexual exploitation.
Information is organized into four categories:
- Trafficking,
- Prostitution,
- Pornography, and
- Organized and Institutionalized
Sexual Exploitation
and Violence.
Sources were not contacted to verify information. Close examination will reveal
that there are contradictions in information depending on the sources of information
(ex: how many women are in prostitution in Thailand). All statistics are reported
with no attempt to evaluate which numbers are more likely to be accurate. In fact,
the exact numbers in many cases are not known and estimates come from different sources
which use different methods to determine what they report.
We hope these facts will assist people to recognize the harm caused throughout the world
by sexual violence and exploitation and catalyze action against this violence agianst women.
This project was made possible with the support of the College of Arts and Sciences,
University of Rhode Island and the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD), Norway.
If you use this information in your work, please reference this factbook-- The Factbook on
Global Sexual Exploitation, Donna M. Hughes, Laura Joy Sporcic, Nadine Z. Mendelsohn,
Vanessa Chirgwin, Coalition Against Trafficking in Women, 1999.
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Sweden
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| TRAFFICKING |
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Sweden is used as a transit country for trafficking Latin American women
to brothels in Denmark, Germany and the Netherlands. (Mansson, 1995). ("Trafficking
of Women to the European Union: Characterisitics, Trends and Policy Issues,"
European Conference on Trafficking in Women, (June 1996), IOM,
7 May 1996)
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| PROSTITUTION |
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here are 2,500 prostituted women in massage parlors, escort agencies, private
apartments and on the streets in Sweden. An estimated 650 women are street-prostitutes.
(Belinda Goldsmith, "Swedish sex buyers feel law’s weak slap," Reuters,
14 June 1998)
An estimated 125,000 men purchase sexual services each year in Sweden. (Government
spokesman, Belinda Goldsmith, "Swedish sex buyers feel law’s weak slap," Reuters,
14 June 1998)
Policy and Law
Beginning in 1999 purchasing sex will be a criminal offense in Sweden. (Belinda
Goldsmith, "Swedish sex buyers feel law’s weak slap," Reuters, 14 June
1998)
New legislation, marking Sweden’s attitude towards prostitution will prohibit
purchase of sexual services. Obtaining casual sexual services (prostitution)
against payment is to be prohibited, punishable by fines or imprisonment for
up to six months. The attempted offense including all forms of sexual services,
whether they are purchased on the street, in brothels, in so-called massage-institutes,
etc are also to be an offense. Prostitution is not a desirable social phenomenon.
The government considers that it is not reasonable to punish the person who
sells a sexual service. In the majority of cases at least, this person is
a weaker partner who is exploited by those who want only to satisfy their
sexual drives. ("Violence
Against Women," 1998)
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| PORNOGRAPHY |
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Policy and Law
As of 1997, possession of child pornography is not a crime. ("Child sexploitation
within the law's reach." The Nation, 02 Jul 1997)
In December 1997, plans were announced to outlaw by January 1, 1999 the possession,
procurement, import, or export of child pornography using whatever means available,
including the Internet. It will specifically outlaw computer-generated pornography.
("Sweden - Anti Child Porn Legislation Plans," Newsbytes, 23 December
1997)
In May 1998 Sweden moved to make the possession of child pornography illegal.
The legislation is to take effect from January 1, 1999. ("Sweden takes first
step to criminalise child porn," Reuters, 13 May 1998)
Official Response and Action
Swedish police seized 300 hours of film showing Western men with Sri Lankan
children in 1995. ("Sri Lankan children for sale on the Internet," (Julian
West, New Delhi, London Telegraph, 26 Oct 1997)
Public Response
Photographs of naked teenage boys were exhibited in Sweden’s Stockholm Historical
Museum. Despite complaints that the photographs were tantamount to child pornography,
the board of the Cultural Capital organizing committee decided that the exhibition
would continue. The exhibit was later destroyed by a gang of youths. ("Swedish
youths destroy photo show of naked boys," Reuters, 30 June 1998)
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ORGANIZED AND INSTITUTIONALIZED
SEXUAL EXPLOITATION AND VIOLENCE |
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Policy and Law
A new offense is to be introduced into the Penal Code, to deal with repeated
punishable acts directed by men against women having a close relationship
with the perpetrator (gross violation of a woman's integrity), but also covers
children and other closely related persons (gross violation of integrity).
Gross violation of a woman's integrity, means: if a man commits certain criminal
acts (assault, unlawful threat or coercion, sexual or other molestation, sexual
exploitation, etc) against a woman to whom he is or has been married or with
whom he is or has been cohabiting, he shall be sentenced for gross violation
of the woman's integrity, instead of for the crime that each of the acts comprise.
A necessary condition for sentencing for the new offense is that the acts
were part of a repeated violation of the woman's integrity and were suited
to seriously damage her self-confidence. The punishment is imprisonment for
at least six months and at most six years ("Violence
Against Women," 1998)
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