Abstract

This work investigates the associations between experiences of domestic minor sex trafficking and adolescent interpersonal violence victimizations, including intimate partner violence (IPV) and community violence. Abuse and violence in childhood are commonly proposed as risk factors for domestic minor sex trafficking. However, less is known about how interpersonal violence victimizations in adolescence connect to domestic minor sex trafficking experiences. The poly-victimization framework provides a means to understand domestic minor sex trafficking as a type of violence amid a web of additional interconnected violence victimizations. Efforts to better understand the interpersonal violence experienced by survivors of domestic minor sex trafficking are valuable in contextualizing trafficking experiences for adolescents. Data from The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, a population-based sample of adolescents in the United States (n = 12,605) were used to examine experiences of domestic minor sex trafficking for minor respondents, as measured through questions about exchanging sex for money or drugs. A multivariable logistic regression model was used to estimate the associations between domestic minor sex trafficking and IPV or community violence, while controlling for demographic variables and adolescent risk behaviors. Minors who experience community violence had significantly greater odds of having exchanged sex (aOR: 1.86; 95% CI: 1.32 -2.64). However, IPV was not significantly associated with minors’ experiences of sex exchange (aOR: 1.14; 95% CI: 0.85 -1.54). Alcohol or drug use (aOR: 1.87; 95% CI: 1.32 -2.65) and having run away (aOR: 2.04; 95% CI: 1.53 -2.72) were also significantly associated with minor sex exchange. As experiences of domestic minor sex trafficking were significantly associated with community violence victimizations, prevention and intervention efforts targeting youth at high risk for or survivors of domestic minor sex trafficking should consider how community violence victimizations impact these adolescent populations, and programming/messaging should be adjusted to account for these additional violence victimizations.

Highlights

  • Minor sex trafficking in the United States (U.S.) is frequently referred to as domestic minor sex trafficking (DMST), and it is defined as any minor who is a U.S citizen or legal resident and who is involved in a commercial sex act (Kotrla, 2010)

  • This study examined DMST in the polyvictimization framework by using a measure that captured minors engaging in commercial sex exchange. (Respondents were asked: “Have you ever given someone sex in exchange for drugs or money?” or “Since [the last interview], how many times have you given someone sex in exchange for drugs or money?”) The measured sex exchange was experienced by minor respondents in this study, meaning these minor sex exchange (MSE) experiences qualify as DMST under federal law

  • Understanding that minors who experience community violence are significantly more likely to experience DMST demonstrated the interconnected nature of trafficking violence to other forms of interpersonal violence

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Summary

Introduction

Minor sex trafficking in the United States (U.S.) is frequently referred to as domestic minor sex trafficking (DMST), and it is defined as any minor (under age 18) who is a U.S citizen or legal resident and who is involved in a commercial sex act (Kotrla, 2010). No credible prevalence or count estimates for DMST exist and recent scholarship has cautioned against continuing to cite current flawed estimates (Franchino-Olsen et al., Franchino-Olsen et al.2020; National Academies of Sciences Engineering and Medicine, 2020). The antihuman trafficking field is rapidly adapting and applying emerging methodologies to generate improved estimates of human trafficking, including estimates of DMST (Franchino-Olsen et al, 2020; National Academies of Sciences Engineering and Medicine, 2020)

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