La Strada Documentation Center

Human Trafficking and Regulating Prostitution

Document number
3005
Date
2012
Title
Human Trafficking and Regulating Prostitution
Author/publisher
Samuel Lee, Petra Persson
Availability
View/save PDF version of this document
Document type(s)
Guidelines/Recommendations, International Law, Research/Study/Analysis,
Keywords
human trafficking, human rights, prostitution, sex work, criminalisation, regularisation, marriage
Summary
Abstract:      
The effect of prostitution laws on human trafficking and voluntary prostitution is subject to debate. We argue theoretically that neither legalization nor criminalization can simultaneously protect voluntary prostitutes and unambiguously reduce trafficking. We propose a novel, “hybrid” policy that achieves both objectives and restores the free market outcome that arises in the absence of trafficking. If a regulator aims to eradicate all prostitution instead, the optimal policy criminalizes all johns. Criminalizing prostitutes is ineffective and unjust because it fails to eradicate trafficking and penalizes victims. We consider cross-border trafficking, sex tourism, social norms, and political support for prostitution laws. The model predicts that the female-male income ratio is a key determinant of what share of prostitutes is trafficked, the consequences of prostitution laws, and the political will to enact or enforce them.