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Part One of Three
ABSTRACT, INTRODUCTION, METHOD
ABSTRACT
We initiated this research in order to address
some of the issues that have arisen in discussions about the
nature of prostitution. In particular: is prostitution just
a job or is it a violation of human rights? From the authors'
perspective, prostitution is an act of violence against women;
it is an act which is intrinsically traumatizing to the person
being prostituted. We interviewed 475 people (including women,
men and the transgendered) currently and recently prostituted
in five countries (South Africa, Thailand, Turkey, USA, Zambia).
In response to questionnaires which inquired about current
and lifetime history of physical and sexual violence, what
was needed in order to leave prostitution and current symptoms
of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) we found that violence
marked the lives of these prostituted people. Across countries,
73 percent reported physical assault in prostitution, 62 percent
reported having been raped since entering prostitution, 67
percent met criteria for a diagnosis of PTSD. On average, 92
percent stated that they wanted to leave prostitution. We investigated
effects of race, and whether the person was prostituted on
the street or in a brothel. Despite limitations of sample selection,
these findings suggest that the harm of prostitution is not
culture-bound. Prostitution is discussed as violence and human
rights violation.
INTRODUCTION
In an effort to document the experiences
of women in prostitution, we interviewed and administered psychological
tests to 475 people currently and recently prostituted in five
countries (South Africa, Thailand, Turkey, USA, Zambia). These
people live in social and legal contexts defining them variously
as hated and filthy women, criminals and 'sex workers'. We
inquired about respondents' histories of violence in childhood,
and in adult prostitution. For many, these two historical periods
overlapped. Since violence is associated with psychological
trauma, we also inquired about the severity of current symptoms
of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
We began this work from the perspective that
prostitution itself is violence against women. The authors
understand prostitution to be a sequela of childhood sexual
abuse; understand that racism is inextricably connected to
sexism in prostitution; understand that prostitution is domestic
violence, and in many instances -- slavery or debt bondage;
and we also understand the need for asylum and culturally relevant
treatment when considering escape or treatment options for
those in prostitution. The perspective that prostitution is
violence against women and other political perspectives on
prostitution have been described and critiqued by Jeffreys
(1997).
Another viewpoint considers prostitution
to be an issue which primarily involves economic and sexual
determination (Bell, 1994). Prostitutes' rights advocates understand
prostitution as just another job, a vocation that they should
have a choice to make, and as sexual liberation. Alexander
(1996) commented on the advantage to the prostitutes' rights
movement brought about by the AIDS epidemic. HIV has indirectly
facilitated the growth of the commercial sex industry by funding
outreach programs which provide sex workers with a safesex
education, condoms, union-style organizing and by legitimizing
prostitution as commercial sex work. Customers' anxieties about
contracting HIV from those in prostitution has further created
a vast pool of research and education monies. The contribution
of this study to these differing perspectives will be discussed
later.
Sexual and other physical violence is the
normative experience for women in prostitution. This has been
clinically noted by all four authors, and reported by others
(Baldwin, 1992; Farley and Barkan, 1998; Hunter, 1994; McKeganey
and Barnard, 1996; Silbert and Pines, 1982; Vanwesenbeeck,
1994). Noting 'everpresent' violence against 361 prostituted
women in Glasgow, UK, McKeganey and Barnard (1996) described
a range of violent behaviors against women in prostitution
ranging from name-calling to physical assault, rape and murder.
Of the prostituted women interviewed by Hoigard and Finstad
(1992) in Norway, 73 percent were exposed to acts of violence
-- physical assaults, rapes, confinement and threats of murder.
The remaining 27 percent spoke of the extreme violence which
had victimized their friends. The Council for Prostitution
Alternatives in Portland, Oregon, USA, reported that prostituted
women were raped about once a week (Hunter, 1994). A Canadian
report on prostitution and pornography found that women and
girls in prostitution had a mortality rate 40 times higher
than the national average (Baldwin, 1992).
The diagnosis of PTSD describes psychological
symptoms which result from violent trauma. In the language
of the American Psychiatric Association (1994), PTSD can result
when people have experienced:
. . . extreme traumatic stressors involving
direct personal experience of an event that involves actual
or threatened death or serious injury; or other threat to
one's personal integrity; or witnessing an event that involves
death, injury or a threat to the physical integrity of another
person; or learning about unexpected or violent death, serious
harm, or threat of death or injury experienced by a family
member or other close associate.
In response to these events, the person with
PTSD experiences fear and helplessness.
Exposure to any of these events may lead
to the formation of symptoms of PTSD. These symptoms are grouped
into three categories: symptoms of traumatic re-experiencing
(items 1-4 in Table 1); efforts to avoid stimuli which are
similar to the trauma as well as a general numbing of responsiveness
(items 5-11); and symptoms of autonomic nervous system hyperarousal
(items 12-17).
TABLE I
Symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
1. Repeated, disturbing
memories, thoughts or images of past trauma
2. Repeated, disturbing dreams of past trauma
3. Suddenly acting or feeling as if trauma from the past were
happening again
(as if you were reliving it)
4. Feeling very upset when something reminds you of past trauma
5. Avoiding thinking or talking about past trauma or avoiding
having feelings related to it
6. Avoiding activities or situations because they remind you
of past trauma
7. Trouble remembering important parts of past trauma
8. Loss of interest in activities which you previously enjoyed
9. Feeling distant or cut off from people
10. Feeling emotionally numb or unable to have loving feelings
for those close to you
11. Feeling as if your future will be cut short
12. Having physical reactions (such as heart pounding, trouble
breathing, sweating)
when something reminds you of
past trauma
13. Trouble falling or staying asleep
14. Feeling irritable or having angry outbursts
15. Difficulty concentrating
15.Difficulty concentrating
16. Being 'superalert' or watchful or on guard
17. Feeling jumpy or easily startled
17. Feeling jumpy or easily startled |
Authors of the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders (American Psychiatric Association,
1994) comment that PTSD may be especially severe or long-lasting
when the stressor is of human design (e.g. torture, rape).
The following are two examples of symptoms
of PTSD: many years after escaping from prostitution, an Okinawan
woman who was purchased by US military personnel during the
Vietnam War became extremely agitated and had flashbacks of
sexual assaults on the 15th and 30th of each month -- those
days which were US military paydays (Sturdevant and Stoltzfus,
1992). Describing symptoms which were ignored by her counselor,
a survivor of prostitution from the USA stated:
I wonder why I keep going to therapists
and telling them I can't sleep, and I have nightmares. They
pass right over the fact that I was a prostitute and I was
beaten with 2 x 4 boards, I had my fingers and toes broken
by a pimp, and I was raped more than 30 times. Why do they
ignore that? (Farley and Barkan, 1998).
The symptoms of PTSD may be cumulative over
one's lifetime. Several studies report a positive correlation
between a history of childhood sexual assault and symptoms
of PTSD in adult women (Farley and Keaney, 1994, 1997; Rodriguez
et al., 1997). Since almost all prostituted women have histories
of childhood sexual abuse, this undoubtedly contributes to
their current symptoms of post-traumatic stress.
Prolonged and repeated trauma usually precedes
entry into prostitution. From 55 to 90 percent of those in
prostitution report a childhood sexual abuse history (Bagley
and Young, 1987; Belton, 1992; Farley and Barkan, 1998; Harlan
et al., 1981; James and Meyerding, 1977; Silbert and Pines,
1981, 1983; Simons and Whitbeck, 1991). Silbert and Pines (1981,
1983) noted that 70 percent of their sample told them that
the earlier sexual abuse had an influence on the later ,choice'
to become a prostitute. A conservative estimate of the average
age of recruitment into prostitution in the USA is 13-14 years
(Silbert and Pines, 1982; Weisberg, 1985). Any distinction
between prostitution of children and prostitution of adults
is arbitrary, and obscures this lengthy history of trauma.
The 15-year-old in prostitution eventually turns 18, but she
has not suddenly made a new vocational choice. She simply continues
to be exploited by customers and pimps.
A number of authors (e.g. Barry, 1995; Hoigard
and Finstad, 1992; Leidholdt, 1993; Ross et al., 1990; Vanwesenbeeck,
1994) have described the psychological defenses which are necessitated
by the experience of prostitution, and which frequently persist:
splitting off certain kinds of awareness and memories, disembodiment,
dissociation, amnesia, hiding one's real self (often until
the nonprostituted self begins to blur), depersonalization,
denial. One woman said, 'Only my head belongs to me now. I've
left my body on the street' (Hoigard and Finstad, 1992).
Some have criticized the application of any
psychiatric terminology to women who have been harmed by the
sexism, racism or class prejudice which comprises male supremacy.
There is an assumption that the oppression is dismissed once
a psychiatric diagnosis is applied. Pejorative terms such as
'masochistic', 'deviant' or 'borderline' have certainly caused
pain and sometimes additional harm to women in prostitution.
On the other hand, the concept of PTSD has
been important in describing the psychological symptoms suffered
by combat veterans, sexual abuse survivors, concentration camp
survivors -- and it may also be useful in describing the psychological
harm of prostitution. The authors' experience is that when
the trauma-related symptoms of PTSD are discussed, survivors
of prostitution feel less stigmatized, less 'crazy' and may
experience relief at having their symptoms named. Attaching
a name to symptoms associated with severe trauma makes it possible
for survivors of prostitution to learn about their own and
others' experiences. Further, it becomes possible for survivors
to organize politically around their own health needs, just
as gay men have organized around HIV.
The diagnosis of PTSD is a departure both
from the biological viewpoint that psychological symptoms are
essentially biochemical in origin and from the psychoanalytic
notion that psychological symptoms result from intrapsychic
turmoil. The diagnosis of PTSD requires an external stressor,
clearly implying that psychological symptoms result from material
conditions that oppress women.
The diagnosis of PTSD alone, however, does
not completely articulate the extent of the psychological harm
caused by prostitution. Over time, the constant violence of
prostitution, the constant humiliation, and the social indignity
and misogyny, result in personality changes. Herman (1992)
described long-term changes in trauma survivors' emotional
regulation, changes in consciousness, changes in self-perception,
changes in perception of perpetrator(s), changes in relations
with others, and changes in systems of meaning. These personality
changes have been called complex PTSD by Herman and others.
Describing prostitution, one woman said:
It's a process. The first year was like
a big party, but eventually progressed downward to the emptiest
void of hopelessness. I ended up desensitized, completely
deadened, not able to have good feelings because I was on
'void' all the time.
Herman saw these symptoms as resulting from
a history of subjection to totalitarian control over a prolonged
period, and noted that organized sexual exploitation may be
one cause of complex PTSD. The violence of pimps is aimed not
only at punishment and control of women in prostitution, but
at establishing their worthlessness and invisibility (Dworkin,
1997; Patterson, 1982). The hatred and contempt aimed at those
in prostitution is ultimately internalized. The resulting self-hatred
and lack of self-respect are extremely long-lasting.
Graham et al. (1994) have also described
the psychological consequences of being in prostitution. The
Stockholm syndrome -- a psychological strategy for survival
in captivity -- is useful in explaining the traumatic bonding
which occurs between women in prostitution and their pimps/captors.
When a person holds life-or-death power over another, small
kindnesses are perceived with immense gratitude. In order to
survive on a day-to-day basis, it is necessary to deny the
extent of harm which pimps and customers are capable of inflicting.
Survival of the person in prostitution depends on her ability
to predict others' behavior. So she develops a vigilant attention
to the pimp's needs and may ultimately identify with his view
of the world. This increases her chances for survival, as did
Patty Hearst's identification with her captors' ideology. Graham
described other behaviors which are typical of the Stockholm
syndrome: extreme difficulty leaving one's captor and a long-term
fear of retaliation.
Barry (1995) and Giobbe et al. (1990) estimate
that at least 90 percent of prostitution is pimp-controlled.
Sexual and physical abuse and torture are used by pimps to
keep women from escaping prostitution (Barry, 1995; Dworkin,
1997; Hunter, 1994; MacKinnon, 1993). Pimps in Washington,
DC, USA, employ ,catchers' -- thugs who stand guard at the
borders of their turf and 'catch' girls trying to escape from
prostitution (Michelle J. Anderson, personal communication,
1996).
Houskamp and Foy (199 1) suggested that a
primary etiological variable for the development of PTSD in
battered women is the extent of violence to which they have
been subjected. Giobbe et al. (1990) compared prostitution
to other forms of domestic violence. They described methods
of coercive control exercised by pimps and customers over women
in prostitution which are identical to the methods used by
battering men to control women: isolation, verbal abuse, economic
control, threats and physical intimidation, denial of harm
and sexual assault used as a means of control.
Although the incidence of PTSD has been investigated
among battered women, and ranges from 45 percent to as high
as 84 percent (Houskamp and Foy, 1991; Kemp et al., 1991; Saunders,
1994) -- the frequency of the diagnosis has not been investigated
among prostituted women, who are exposed to the same violence
as battered women.
PTSD has been assessed in people from non-Western
cultures, such as Southeast Asian refugees, Latin American
disaster survivors, Navajo and Sioux Vietnam veterans (Marsella
et al., 1996). A recent review of the PTSD literature noted
that its major limitation is that many of the most traumatized
populations have not been studied (de Girolamo and McFarlane,
1996; Keane et al., 1996). Our study documents, across several
cultures, some of the violence and traumatic stress which result
from being prostituted.
METHOD
Brief structured interviews of people in
prostitution were conducted in San Francisco, CA, USA; in two
cities in Thailand; in Lusaka, Zambia; in Istanbul, Turkey;
and in two cities in South Africa. These countries were included
in the study in part because of the first author's wish to
include a majority of women of color, since globally prostitution
exploits vast numbers of women of color. Second, all four authors
shared a commitment to the project of documenting the experiences
of women in prostitution, and to providing options for escape.
If respondents indicated that they were working
as prostitutes, they were asked to respond to a 23-item questionnaire
which asked about the following: physical and sexual assault
in prostitution; lifetime history of physical and sexual violence;
and the use of or making of pornography during prostitution.
The questionnaire asked whether respondents wished to leave
prostitution and what they needed in order to leave. We asked
if they had been homeless; if they had physical health problems;
and if they had a problem with drugs or alcohol or both.
Respondents also completed the PCL, a 17-item
scale which assesses DSM-IV symptoms of PTSD (Weathers et al.,
1993). Respondents were asked to rate the 17 symptoms of PTSD
(see Table 1) on a scale where: I = not at all; 2 = a little
bit; 3 = moderately; 4 = quite a bit; and 5 = extremely. Weathers
et al. (1993) report PCL test-retest reliability of .96; internal
consistency, as measured by an alpha coefficient, was .97 for
all 17 items. Validity of the scale is reflected in its strong
correlations with the Mississippi Scale (.93); the PK scale
of the MMPI-2 (.77); and the Impact of Event Scale (.90). The
PCL has functioned comparably across ethnic subcultures in
the USA (Keane et al., 1996).
We measured symptoms of PTSD in three ways.
First, using a procedure established by the authors of the
scale, we generated a measure of overall PTSD symptom severity by
summing respondents' ratings across all 17 items.
Second, using Weathers et al.'s (1993) scoring
suggestion, we considered a score of 3 or above on a given
PCL item to be a symptom of PTSD. Using those scores of 3 or
above, we then noted whether each respondent met criteria
for a diagnosis of PTSD. PTSD consists of three kinds of
symptoms: persistent, intrusive re-experiencing of trauma (B
symptoms); numbing of responsiveness and persistent avoidance
of stimuli associated with trauma (C symptoms); and persistent
autonomic hyperarousal (D symptoms). A diagnosis of PTSD requires
at least one B symptom, three C symptoms, and two D symptoms.
We report the numbers and percentages of respondents who qualified
for a diagnosis of PTSD in each country.
Third, we measured partial PTSD, following
Houskamp and Foy (1991) who investigated PTSD among battered
women. These authors suggested that if a person meets at least
two of the three foregoing criteria for PTSD, a significant
degree of psychological impairment exists. We report the numbers
and percentages of respondents who qualified for a diagnosis
of partial PTSD in each country.
The two questionnaires were translated into
Thai and Turkish. In Zambia, interviewers translated verbally
as needed -most participants spoke some English. The authors
either administered or directly supervised the administration
of all questionnaires.
In San Francisco, we interviewed 130 respondents
on the street who verbally confirmed that they were prostituting.
We interviewed respondents in four different areas in San Francisco
where people worked as prostitutes.
In Thailand, we interviewed several of the
I 10 respondents on the street, but found that pimps did not
allow those they controlled to answer our questions. We interviewed
some respondents at a beauty parlor which offered a supportive
atmosphere. The majority of the Thai respondents were interviewed
at an agency in northern Thailand that offered nonjudgmental
support and job training.
We interviewed 68 prostituted people in Johannesburg
and Capetown, South Africa, in brothels, on the street and
at a drop-in center.
We interviewed 117 women currently and formerly
prostituted at TASINTHA in Lusaka, Zambia. TASINTHA is a nongovernmental
organization which offers food, vocational training and community
to approximately 600 prostituted women a week.
In Turkey, some women work legally in brothels
which are privately owned and controlled by local commissions
composed of physicians, police and others who are 'in charge
of public morality'. We were not permitted to interview women
in brothels, so we interviewed 50 prostituted women who were
brought to a hospital in Istanbul by police for the purpose
of venereal disease control.
In two of the five countries, respondents
were racially diverse. In the USA, 39 percent (51) of the 130
interviewees were white European/American, 33 percent (43)
were African American, 18 percent (24) were Latina, 6 percent
(8) were Asian or Pacific Islander and 5 percent (4) described
themselves as of mixed race or left the question blank. In
South Africa, 50 percent (34) were white European; 29 percent
(20) were African or Black; 12 percent (8) described themselves
as Colored or Brown or of mixed race; 3 percent (2) were Indian;
6 percent (4) left the question blank.
We included transgendered people in this
study because they represent a significant minority of those
in prostitution. A previous study (Farley and Barkan, 1998)
found that transgendered persons experienced the same degree
of physical assaults and rapes as did women in prostitution.
These authors concluded that to be female, or to appear female,
was to be targeted for violence in prostitution. In Turkey
and Zambia, all respondents were women. Table 2 below describes
gender of respondents in South Africa, Thailand, and the USA.
TABLE 2
Gender
| . |
Women |
Men |
Transgendered |
| South Africa |
84% (57) |
14% (10) |
2% (l) |
| Thailand |
75% (82) |
. |
25% (28) |
| USA |
75% (97) |
13% (18) |
12% (15) |
Across the
five countries, the average age was 28 years, ranging from
12 to 61 years. See Table 3.
TABLE 3
Age
| . |
South Africa |
Thailand |
Turkey |
USA |
Zambia |
| Mean age |
24 |
26 |
29 |
31 |
28 |
| Age range |
17-38 |
15-46 |
16-55 |
14-61 |
12-53 |
Sample Selection Differences and Limitations
to Generalizability
The most daunting challenge in cross-cultural
research is sample selection. Were the 475 people we interviewed
representative of all women in prostitution? We attempted,
as McKeganey and Barnard (1996) did in Glasgow, UK, to contact
as broad as possible a range of those in prostitution: women
of diverse races, cultures, ages, location where working, and
including gender differences. However, 'there is quite simply
no such thing as a representative sample of women selling sex'
(McKeganey and Barnard, 1996). Given the illegality of prostitution
in most places, it was necessary to interview those people
to whom we had access. In most cases, researchers have access
only to people prostituting on the street. We were fortunate
that, in South Africa, we were able to interview 25 people
in brothel prostitution. Should it become possible to interview
those in massage parlors, escort services, stripping, or others
who are in brothel prostitution -- the authors would immediately
include these people in a future expansion of this work. We
will also share our questionnaires with researchers who have
access to these groups of people.
There were differences in the ways the samples
were selected. In all cases, we interviewed people who were
either currently in prostitution or had recently been prostituted.
In the USA and South Africa, all were currently prostituting,
whereas a higher proportion of respondents in Thailand and
Zambia were actively attempting to leave prostitution and find
other employment. Respondents in Turkey were interviewed after
they were brought to a clinic by police for STD testing. In
Istanbul, as elsewhere in this study, women in prostitution
were freely offered STD testing, but other acute and chronic
health problems were rarely addressed.
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