Here’s what ought to be a very simple question, inspired by Katherine Jean Lopez: If some scumbag is peddling the body of an exploited 14-year-old girl on the street, does he become more or less difficult to catch and punish in a world where prohibition has created a black market in prostitution. Think about it… Think hard…
Sigh
March 12th, 2008 · 6 Comments
Tags: Sexual Politics
6 responses so far ↓
1 Anonymo // Mar 12, 2008 at 11:11 am
Link’s f’ed up.
2 Laure // Mar 12, 2008 at 2:00 pm
I agree in theory although I’ll note that in BC, Canada, where prostitution laws are at least less onerous than in the states (it is legal for those 18+ to sell sex), there is a significant traffic in underage & youth sex and also one of the most incredible/awful cases of prostitute-murders ever recorded.
3 Barry // Mar 13, 2008 at 12:16 pm
I would respond, but you tricked me into reading an NRO article; I’m now a drooling brainless zombie, incapable of sending thoughts through the intertubes.
4 Lemmy Caution // Mar 14, 2008 at 12:54 pm
This new york times article is relevant:
I changed my mind after looking at the experiences of other countries. The Netherlands formally adopted the legalization model in 2000, and there were modest public health benefits for the licensed prostitutes. But legalization nurtured a large sex industry and criminal gangs that trafficked underage girls, and so trafficking, violence and child prostitution flourished rather than dying out.
As a result, the Netherlands is now backtracking on its legalization model by closing some brothels, and other countries, like Bulgaria, are backing away from that approach.
In contrast, Sweden experimented in 1999 with a radically different approach that many now regard as much more successful: it decriminalized the sale of sex but made it a crime to buy sex. In effect, the policy was to arrest customers, but not the prostitutes.
Some Swedish prostitutes have complained that the policy reduced demand and thus lowered prices, while forcing sex work underground. But the evidence is strong that the new approach reduced trafficking in Sweden, and opinion polls show that Swedes regard the experiment as a considerable success. And the bottom line is that if you want to rape a 13-year-old girl imported from Eastern Europe, you’ll have a much easier time in Amsterdam than in Stockholm.
5 Julian Sanchez // Mar 15, 2008 at 11:37 am
Without getting into detail here, I have some serious problems with the idea that you can meaningfully make a comparison between Amsterdam and Stockholm, and then draw inferences from that comparison for the U.S.
6 whiffle // Mar 19, 2008 at 3:39 am
Depends. The criminalization might drive everything so far underground that nothing ever gets caught because it might as well be in another world. Or–it might drive most of it underground but not too deeply, so that whatever occasionally surfaces will stand in sharper contrast to a street scene with fewer prostitutes and abusees. (And, with prostitution, lots will surface, since it’s a service industry.)
So, despite your facile “Sigh,” whether abusees are helped or not by criminalization might depend (among other things) on the details of how such laws affect the signal-to-noise ratio of how vulnerable populations appear to the outside world.
Making (keeping) prostitution illegal will harm some by a black-market effect, and legalizing it will harm others by increasing the core of a practice whose thus-increased margins will always be ugly. Do you claim to have an analysis comparing the two? To your “sigh,” I say, “ugh.”