Abstract

ABSTRACT Studies examining the relationship between sex trafficking victimization and race/ethnicity are typically limited to organizational or national-level data. State-level and local-level analyses are limited and typically do not occur simultaneously. The aim of the current study is to examine the race/ethnicity of sex trafficking survivors relative to the population on state and local levels in the state of Missouri. Data were derived from survey responses involving 107 social service, healthcare, law enforcement and legal service professionals who reported working with 402 human trafficking survivors (sex trafficking alone, n = 349, sex and labor trafficking combined, n = 53) accessing services in the previous year. Results indicate disproportionate sex trafficking victimization of people of color on local, regional and state levels. The results underscore the necessity for anti-oppressive practice on micro, mezzo, and macro levels. Engaging in critical consciousness and integrating cultural strengths in practice, incorporating the role of structural oppression and including diverse case scenarios in trainings, including diverse images on organizational outreach and training materials, recruiting and hiring people of color in service provision, and working to address structural oppressions and risks on a policy level are recommended.

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