COVID-19大流行对网络性广告和性交易的影响

Q1 Social Sciences Journal of Human Trafficking Pub Date : 2023-08-13 DOI:10.1080/23322705.2023.2215362
Julia O. Coxen, Vanessa Castro, Bridgette Carr, Glen Bredin, Seth Guikema
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引用次数: 0

摘要

COVID-19大流行等破坏性社会事件可能对性贩运和受害者的工作条件产生重大影响,但人们对这些影响知之甚少。本文通过分析在线平台Rubratings.com上的100多万条性服务广告,并使用第三方管理指标作为潜在的贩运代理,研究了COVID-19大流行对美国性贩运的影响。我们的研究结果表明,在美国,无论是否有第三方管理指标,在线商业性服务广告都出现了可衡量的变化,在大流行开始前后出现了显著下降,并发布了居家令,随后增加到远高于大流行前的水平,与covid相关的限制措施放松时相对应。我们认为,最初的减少可能是由于与大流行病有关的健康问题导致对性服务的需求减少造成的,但是,包括商业性行业工作者缺乏经济和社会支持在内的一系列因素,可能增加了易受剥削和成为贩运受害者的人数。这项研究增加了对性交易如何适应公共领域事件的理解。
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COVID-19 Pandemic’s Impact on Online Sex Advertising and Sex Trafficking
Disruptive social events such as the COVID-19 pandemic can have a significant impact on sex trafficking and the working conditions of victims, yet these effects have been little understood. This paper examines the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on sex trafficking in the United States, based on analysis of over one million sexual service advertisements from the online platform Rubratings.com, using indicators of third-party management as potential proxies for trafficking. Our results show that there have been measurable changes in online commercial sexual service advertising, both with and without third-party management indicators, in the United States, with a significant decrease occurring around the time of the start of the pandemic and the issuance of stay-at-home orders followed by an increase to levels well above pre-pandemic levels corresponding in time to when COVID-related restrictions were relaxed. We argue that the initial decrease could have been induced by a loss of demand for sexual services due to pandemic-related health concerns, but that a confluence of factors, including the lack of economic and social support for those working in the commercial sex industry, may have increased the number of people vulnerable to being exploited and becoming trafficking victims. This research adds to the understanding of the way sex trafficking adapts to events in the public sphere.
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来源期刊
Journal of Human Trafficking
Journal of Human Trafficking Social Sciences-Anthropology
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
40
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