Is Prostitution a Choice?

Jan 29, 2023

What are CSE and Sex Trafficking?


Many organizations, including federal agencies such as the FBI, recognize sex trafficking as modern-day slavery.


Nevada’s had a legalized sex trade for 48 years and its illegal sex trade is the largest in the country — 63 percent larger than the next largest state. A 2013 study in the European Journal of Law and Economics compared data from countries that had legalized prostitution versus those that hadn’t. It found that sex trafficking is “most prevalent in countries where prostitution is legalized.” Sex buyers in Nevada are notoriously unconcerned with accessing sex legally or illegally — and many don’t know the difference. Women and children have paid the price for Nevada’s laws and 71% of those sold for sex in Nevada are at risk of having been trafficked.


The entire practice of sex buying has become normalized in Nevada; the community has become groomed. Traffickers come to Nevada to recruit women and children for the sex trade and have even bragged that this is the easiest state in which to recruit because the laws have done much of the work for them. When prostitution is a legal business and viewed as “a job like any other” then it gets the same access and opportunities as any other business. Pimps run for office, go into high schools for career day, work as coaches for high school girls track teams. Awaken has worked with survivors from every high school in the Reno/Sparks area. No school is safe when the demand for sex is high and legal.


The legal sex trade gives permission for the dehumanization of women -which spirals into further negative consequences. Nevada consistently ranks first in the nation for domestic violence fatalities, third in the nation for rape/sexual assault; and fourth in the nation for the women to be murdered by men. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey (NISVS) indicates that 48.1 percent of the women living in Nevada have experienced rape, physical violence, and/or stalking by an intimate partner. Studies show that 71 percent of prostituted women are physically assaulted on the job; 68 percent experience post-traumatic stress at the same levels as combat veterans and victims of torture; and 89 percent wish to escape prostitution. In 2017, the Violence Policy Center ranked Nevada second across the nation in the rate of women murdered by men, after analyzing 2015 homicide data. Black women are affected at disproportionate rates. According to the study, men murdered black women at more than twice the rate of white women.



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