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Title

Trafficking, Client and Police Violence, Sexual Risk and Mental Health Among Women in the Sex Industry at the Thai-Myanmar Border.

Authors

Decker, Michele R.; Meyer, Sarah R.; Branchini Risko, Casey; Abshir, Nada; Mar, Aye Aye; Robinson, W. Courtland

Abstract

This study describes sex trafficking and associations with violence and health among female migrants in the sex industry in Mae Sot, Thailand. The mixed-methods study included a qualitative interview phase (n = 10), followed by a cross-sectional survey phase (n = 128). Entry via trafficking (force, fraud, or coercion [FFC], or as minors) was prevalent (76.6%), primarily FFC (73.4%). FFC was associated with inconsistent condom use, inability to refuse clients, poor health, and anxiety. Past-year violence was normative including client sexual violence (66.4%), client coercion for condom nonuse (> 95%), and police extortion (56%). Working conditions enabled violence irrespective of mode of entry. Profound unmet needs exist for safety and access to justice irrespective of trafficking history.

Subjects

MYANMAR; THAILAND; SEX trafficking; RISK-taking behavior; NOMADS; RESEARCH methodology; CROSS-sectional method; VIOLENCE; MENTAL health; SEX work; QUALITATIVE research; FRAUD; REFUGEES; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; CONDOMS; POLICE; WOMEN'S health; MEDICAL needs assessment; CONTROL (Psychology); UNSAFE sex

Publication

Violence Against Women, 2022, Vol 28, Issue 11, p2677

ISSN

1077-8012

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1177/10778012211060860

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