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History of sexual slavery in the United States

The history of sexual slavery in the United States is the history of slavery for the purpose of sexual exploitation as it exists in the United States.

Early Americas edit

It is contended by some that as early as the 1490s Christopher Columbus had established trade in sex slaves on Hispaniola, which included sex slaves as young as nine years old.[1][2][3] Within 25 years of being colonized, the Native population of Hispaniola drastically declined, due to the effects of enslavement, massacre, and infectious disease.[4]

However, others consider this contention to have arisen from a misreading of primary documents. Columbus does mention the selling of slaves, but as atrocities of a rebelling faction. He continues with this comment, "I declare solemnly that a great number of men have been to the Indies, who did not deserve baptism in the eyes of God or men, and who are now returning thither.” [5]

Under chattel slavery edit

 
Three Young White Men and a Black Woman (1632) by Christiaen van Couwenbergh

From the beginning of African slavery in the North American colonies, slaves were often viewed as property, rather than people. Plaçage, a formalized system of concubinage among slave women or free people of color, developed in Louisiana and particularly New Orleans by the 18th century.

Slave breeding was the attempt by a slave-owner to increase the reproduction of his slaves for profit.[6] It included forced sexual relations between male and female slaves, encouraging slave pregnancies, sexual relations between master and slave to produce slave children, and favoring female slaves who had many children.[7] The historian E. Franklin Frazier, in his book The Negro Family, stated that "there were masters who, without any regard for the preferences of their slaves, mated their human chattel as they did their stock." Ex-slave Maggie Stenhouse remarked, "Durin' slavery there were stockmen. They was weighed and tested. A man would rent the stockman and put him in a room with some young women he wanted to raise children from."[8]

Concubine slaves were the only female slaves who commanded a higher price than skilled male slaves.[9]

In Louisiana edit

 
A print depicting 'comfort women' embarking unwillingly for the Americas

The plaçage system developed from the predominance of white men among early colonial populations, who took women as consorts from Native Americans and enslaved Africans. In this period there was a shortage of European women, as the colonies were dominated in the early day by male explorers and colonists. Given the harsh conditions in Louisiana, persuading women to follow the men was not easy. France sent females convicted along with their debtor husbands, and in 1719, deported 209 women felons "who were of a character to be sent to the French settlement in Louisiana."[10] France also relocated young women and girls known as King's Daughters (French: filles du roi) to the colonies of Canada and Louisiana for marriage.

Through warfare and raids, Native American women were often captured to be traded, sold, or taken as wives. At first, the colony generally imported male Africans to use as slave labor because of the heavy work of clearing to develop plantations. Over time, it also imported African female slaves. Marriage between the races was forbidden according to the Code Noir of the eighteenth century, but interracial sex continued. The upper class European men during this period often did not marry until their late twenties or early thirties. Premarital sex with an intended white bride, especially if she was of high rank, was not permitted socially.

White male colonists, often the younger sons of noblemen, military men, and planters, who needed to accumulate some wealth before they could marry, took women of color as consorts before marriage. Merchants and administrators also followed this practice if they were wealthy enough.

Post-emancipation edit

After the enslaved people were emancipated, many states passed anti-miscegenation laws, which prohibited interracial marriage between whites and non-whites. But this did not stop some white men from taking sexual advantage of black women by using their social positions under the Jim Crow system and white supremacy, or in other parts of the country by ordinary power and wealth dynamics.

The Chinese Tanka females were sold from Guangzhou to work as prostitutes for the overseas Chinese male community in the United States.[11] During the California Gold Rush in the late 1840s, Chinese merchants transported thousands of young Chinese girls, including babies, from China to the United States and sold them into sexual slavery within the red light district of San Francisco. Girls could be bought for as cheap as $40 (about $1104 in 2013 dollars) in Guangzhou, and sold for $400 (about $11,040 in 2013 dollars) in the United States. Many of these girls were forced into opium addiction and lived their entire lives as prostitutes.[12][13] Anglo-American doctors claimed that opium smoking led to increased involvement in prostitution by young white women and to genetic contamination via miscegenation by Chinese men.[14] Anti-Chinese advocates believed America faced a dual dilemma: opium smoking was ruining moral standards and Chinese labor was lowering wages and taking jobs away from European-Americans.[15] Slummers often frequented the brothels and opium dens of Chinatown in the late 1880s and early 1890s.[16] However, by the mid-1890s, slummers rarely participated in Chinese brothels or opium smoking, but instead were shown fake opium joints where Chinese actors and their white wives staged illicit scenes for the benefit of their audiences.[16]

A few captives from Native American tribes who were used as slaves were not freed, when African-American slaves were emancipated. "Ute Woman", a Ute captured by the Arapaho and later sold to a Cheyenne, was one example. Used as a prostitute for sale to American soldiers at Cantonment in the Indian Territory, she lived in slavery until about 1880 when she died of a hemorrhage resulting from "excessive sexual intercourse".[17]

White slavery edit

 
Ad warning about white slavery

By the 19th century, most of America's cities had a designated, legally protected area of prostitution. Increased urbanization and young women entering the workforce led to greater flexibility in courtship without supervision. It is in this changing social sphere that the panic over "white slavery" began. This term referred to women being coerced, lured, or kidnapped for the purposes of prostitution.[18][19]

Numerous communities appointed vice commissions to investigate the extent of local prostitution, whether prostitutes participated in it willingly or were forced into it and the degree to which it was organized by any cartel-type organizations. The second significant action at the local levels was to close the brothels and the red light districts. From 1910 to 1913, city after city withdrew this tolerance and forced the closing of their brothels. Opposition to openly practiced prostitution had been growing steadily throughout the last decades of the 19th century. The federal government's response to the moral panic was the Mann Act. The purpose of the act was to make it a crime to coerce transportation of unwilling women. The statute made it a crime to "transport or cause to be transported, or aid to assist in obtaining transportation for" or to "persuade, induce, entice or coerce" a woman to travel.[20]

 
Ad warning about the use of ice cream parlors to traffic women

According to historian Mark Thomas Connelly, "a group of books and pamphlets appeared announcing a startling claim: a pervasive and depraved conspiracy was at large in the land, brutally trapping and seducing American girls into lives of enforced prostitution, or 'white slavery.' These white slave narratives, or white-slave tracts, began to circulate around 1909."[21]: 114  Such narratives often portrayed innocent girls "victimized by a huge, secret and powerful conspiracy controlled by foreigners", as they were drugged or imprisoned and forced into prostitution.[21]: 116 

This excerpt from The War on the White Slave Trade was written by the United States District Attorney in Chicago:

One thing should be made very clear to the girl who comes up to the city, and that is that the ordinary ice cream parlor is very likely to be a spider's web for her entanglement. This is perhaps especially true of those ice cream saloons and fruit stores kept by foreigners. Scores of cases are on record where young girls have taken their first step towards "white slavery" in places of this character.[22]

Suffrage activists, especially Harriet Burton Laidlaw[23] and Rose Livingston, worked in New York City's Chinatown and in other cities to rescue young white and Chinese girls from forced prostitution, and helped pass the Mann Act to make interstate sex trafficking a federal crime.[20] Livingston publicly discussed her past as a prostitute and claimed to have been abducted and developed a drug problem as a sex slave in a Chinese man's home, narrowly escaped and experienced a Christian conversion narrative.[24][25] Other groups like the Woman's Christian Temperance Union and Hull House focused on children of prostitutes and poverty in community life while trying to pass protective legislation. The American Purity Alliance also supported the Mann Act.[22] In New York City, the Travelers Aid Society of New York provided social services to women at train stations and piers in order to prevent trafficking.[26]

 
Rose Livingston, known as the Angel of Chinatown, worked to free slaves in New York City.

In 1910, the US Congress passed the White Slave Traffic Act of 1910 (better known as the Mann Act), which made it a felony to transport women across state borders for the purpose of "prostitution or debauchery, or for any other immoral purpose". Its primary stated intent was to address prostitution, immorality, and human trafficking particularly where it was trafficking for the purposes of prostitution, but the ambiguity of "immoral purpose" effectively criminalized interracial marriage and banned single women from crossing state borders for morally wrong acts. As more women were being trafficked from foreign countries, the US began passing immigration acts to curtail aliens from entering the country. Several acts such as the Emergency Quota Act of 1921 and Immigration Act of 1924 were passed to prevent emigrants from Europe and Asia from entering the United States. Following the banning of immigrants during the 1920s, human trafficking was not considered a major issue until the 1990s.[27][19]

The 1921 Convention set new goals for international efforts to stem human trafficking, primarily by giving the anti-trafficking movement further official recognition, as well as a bureaucratic apparatus to research and fight the problem. The Advisory Committee on the Traffic of Women and Children was a permanent advisory committee of the League. Its members were nine countries, and several non-governmental organizations. An important development was the implementation of a system of annual reports of member countries. Member countries formed their own centralized offices to track and report on trafficking of women and children.[20] The advisory committee also worked to expand its research and intervention program beyond the United States and Europe. In 1929, a need to expand into the Near East (Asia Minor), the Middle East and Asia was acknowledged. An international conference of central authorities in Asia was planned for 1937, but no further action was taken during the late 1930s.[28]

Sex trafficking edit

Act 18 U.S.C. § 1591, or the Commercial Sex Act, the US makes it illegal to recruit, entice, obtain, provide, move or harbor a person or to benefit from such activities knowing that the person will be caused to engage in commercial sex acts where the person is under 18 or where force, fraud or coercion exists.[29][30]

Under the Bush Administration, fighting sex slavery worldwide and domestically became a priority with an average of $100 million spent per year, which substantially outnumbers the amount spent by other countries. Before President Bush took office, Congress passed the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000 (TVPA). The TVPA strengthened services to victims of violence, law enforcements ability to reduce violence against women and children, and education against human trafficking. Also specified in the TVPA was a mandate to collect funds for the treatment of sex trafficking victims that provided them with shelter, food, education, and financial grants. Internationally, the TVPA set standards that governments of other countries must follow in order to receive aid from the U.S. to fight human trafficking. Once George W. Bush took office in 2001, restricting sex trafficking became one of his primary humanitarian efforts. The Attorney General under President Bush, John Ashcroft, strongly enforced the TVPA. The Act was subsequently renewed in 2004, 2006, and 2008. It established two stipulations an applicant has to meet in order to receive the benefits of a T-Visa. First, a trafficked victim must prove/admit to being trafficked and second must submit to prosecution of his or her trafficker. In 2011, Congress failed to re-authorize the Act. The State Department publishes an annual Trafficking in Persons Report, which examines the progress that the U.S. and other countries have made in destroying human trafficking businesses, arresting the kingpins, and rescuing the victims.[31][32][33]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Kasum, Eric (11 October 2010). "Columbus Day? True Legacy: Cruelty and Slavery". HuffPost. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  2. ^ MacGuill, Dan (26 May 2018). "Did Christopher Columbus Seize, Sell, and Export Sex Slaves? – True – A Facebook meme accurately describes some of Columbus's most brutal practices in the Caribbean". Snopes. Retrieved 26 May 2018.
  3. ^ Christopher Columbus: his life, his work, his remains as revealed by original printed and manuscript records. 1903.
  4. ^ "Hispaniola | Genocide Studies Program". gsp.yale.edu. Retrieved 2022-12-29.
  5. ^ Christopher Columbus, “Letter of the Admiral to the (quondam) nurse of the Prince John, written near the end of the year 1500,” Select Letters of Christopher Columbus (London: Hakluyt Society, 1870), p.165.
  6. ^ Marable, Manning, How capitalism underdeveloped Black America: problems in race, political economy, and society South End Press, 2000, p 72
  7. ^ Marable, ibid, p 72
  8. ^ Work Projects Administration, Slave Narratives: A Folk History of Slavery in the United States from Interviews with Former Slaves, Arkansas Narratives, Part 6, Kessinger Publishing, 2004, p. 154.
  9. ^ Baptist, Edward E. (2001). ""Cuffy," "Fancy Maids," and "One-Eyed Men": Rape, Commodification, and the Domestic Slave Trade in the United States". The American Historical Review. 106 (5): 1619–1650. doi:10.2307/2692741. JSTOR 2692741.
  10. ^ Katy F. Morlas, "La Madame et la Mademoiselle," graduate thesis in history, Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, 2003
  11. ^ Elizabeth Wheeler Andrew; Katharine Caroline Bushnell (2006). Heathen Slaves and Christian Rulers. Echo Library. p. 13. ISBN 1-4068-0431-2. or among Chinese residents as their concubines, or to be sold for export to Singapore, San Francisco, or Australia.
  12. ^ Albert S. Evans (1873). "Chapter 12". . San Francisco: A.L. Bancroft and Company. Archived from the original on 2008-05-11.
  13. ^ Rogers, Jacquie (2010-08-25). "Unusual Historicals: Tragic Tales: Chinese Slave Girls of the Barbary Coast". Unusual Historicals. Retrieved 2022-12-29.
  14. ^ Ahmad, p. 47–48.
  15. ^ Ahmad, p.51.
  16. ^ a b Heap, p.34.
  17. ^ Berthrong, Donald J. (1976). The Cheyenne and Arapaho Ordeal: Reservation and Agency Life in the Indian Territory, 1875 to 1907. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 124. ISBN 0-8061-1277-8.
  18. ^ Matsubara, Hiroyuki (2006). "The 1910s Anti-Prostitution Movement and the Transformation of American Political Culture". The Japanese Journal of American Studies. 17.
  19. ^ a b Donovan, Brian (2006). White Slave Crusades: Race, Gender, and Anti-vice Activism, 1887–1917. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-09100-1.
  20. ^ a b c Brian K. Landsberg. Major Acts of Congress. Macmillan Reference USA: The Gale Group, 2004. 251–253. Print
  21. ^ a b Connelly, Mark Thomas (2018). The Response to Prostitution in the Progressive Era. Chapel Hill: UNC Press Books. ISBN 9781469650142.
  22. ^ a b Bell, Ernest Albert (1910). ... Fighting the traffic in young girls; or, War on the white slave trade; a complete and detailed account of the shameless traffic in young girls . University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. [Chicago? : G.S. Ball.
  23. ^ "We've moved". oasis.lib.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2022-12-29.
  24. ^ Lui, Mary Ting Yi (1 September 2009). "Saving young girls from Chinatown: white slavery and woman suffrage, 1910–1920". Journal of the History of Sexuality.
  25. ^ Massotta, Jodie. Decades of Reform: Prostitutes, Feminists, and the War on White Slavery 2014-07-15 at the Wayback Machine. Diss. University of Vermont, 2013. Print.
  26. ^ Cimino, Eric (Winter 2016). "The Travelers' Aid Society: Moral Reform and Social Work in New York City, 1907–1916". New York History. 97 (1): 34–54. doi:10.1353/nyh.2016.0003. S2CID 165850174. Cimino, Eric (2012). On the Border Line of Tragedy: White Slavery, Moral Protection, and the Travelers' Aid Society of New York, 1885–1917. Ph.D. Diss., Stony Brook University.
  27. ^ Doezema, Jo. "Loose women or lost women? The re-emergence of the myth of white slavery in contemporary discourses of trafficking in women." Gender issues 18.1 (1999): 23–50.
  28. ^ Elizabeth Faue. The Emergence of Modern America(1990 to 1923). Encyclopedia of American History, 2003. pp. 169–170. Print
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-04-27. Retrieved 2010-03-10.
  30. ^ "Victims Of Trafficking And Violence Protection Act of 2000" (PDF).
  31. ^ Soderlund, Gretchen. "Running from the rescuers: new US crusades against sex trafficking and the rhetoric of abolition." nwsa Journal 17.3 (2005): 64–87.
  32. ^ Feingold, David A. "Human trafficking." Foreign Policy (2005): 26–32.
  33. ^ Horning, A. et al. (2014). Trafficking in Persons Report: A Game of Risk. International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice, 38(3).

history, sexual, slavery, united, states, history, sexual, slavery, united, states, history, slavery, purpose, sexual, exploitation, exists, united, states, contents, early, americas, under, chattel, slavery, louisiana, post, emancipation, white, slavery, traf. The history of sexual slavery in the United States is the history of slavery for the purpose of sexual exploitation as it exists in the United States Contents 1 Early Americas 2 Under chattel slavery 3 In Louisiana 4 Post emancipation 5 White slavery 6 Sex trafficking 7 See also 8 ReferencesEarly Americas editMain article Sexual slavery Americas It is contended by some that as early as the 1490s Christopher Columbus had established trade in sex slaves on Hispaniola which included sex slaves as young as nine years old 1 2 3 Within 25 years of being colonized the Native population of Hispaniola drastically declined due to the effects of enslavement massacre and infectious disease 4 However others consider this contention to have arisen from a misreading of primary documents Columbus does mention the selling of slaves but as atrocities of a rebelling faction He continues with this comment I declare solemnly that a great number of men have been to the Indies who did not deserve baptism in the eyes of God or men and who are now returning thither 5 Under chattel slavery editMain article Treatment of slaves in the United States Rape and sexual abuse See also Slavery in the United States Fancy ladies nbsp Three Young White Men and a Black Woman 1632 by Christiaen van CouwenberghFrom the beginning of African slavery in the North American colonies slaves were often viewed as property rather than people Placage a formalized system of concubinage among slave women or free people of color developed in Louisiana and particularly New Orleans by the 18th century Slave breeding was the attempt by a slave owner to increase the reproduction of his slaves for profit 6 It included forced sexual relations between male and female slaves encouraging slave pregnancies sexual relations between master and slave to produce slave children and favoring female slaves who had many children 7 The historian E Franklin Frazier in his book The Negro Family stated that there were masters who without any regard for the preferences of their slaves mated their human chattel as they did their stock Ex slave Maggie Stenhouse remarked Durin slavery there were stockmen They was weighed and tested A man would rent the stockman and put him in a room with some young women he wanted to raise children from 8 Concubine slaves were the only female slaves who commanded a higher price than skilled male slaves 9 In Louisiana editMain article Placage nbsp A print depicting comfort women embarking unwillingly for the AmericasThe placage system developed from the predominance of white men among early colonial populations who took women as consorts from Native Americans and enslaved Africans In this period there was a shortage of European women as the colonies were dominated in the early day by male explorers and colonists Given the harsh conditions in Louisiana persuading women to follow the men was not easy France sent females convicted along with their debtor husbands and in 1719 deported 209 women felons who were of a character to be sent to the French settlement in Louisiana 10 France also relocated young women and girls known as King s Daughters French filles du roi to the colonies of Canada and Louisiana for marriage Through warfare and raids Native American women were often captured to be traded sold or taken as wives At first the colony generally imported male Africans to use as slave labor because of the heavy work of clearing to develop plantations Over time it also imported African female slaves Marriage between the races was forbidden according to the Code Noir of the eighteenth century but interracial sex continued The upper class European men during this period often did not marry until their late twenties or early thirties Premarital sex with an intended white bride especially if she was of high rank was not permitted socially White male colonists often the younger sons of noblemen military men and planters who needed to accumulate some wealth before they could marry took women of color as consorts before marriage Merchants and administrators also followed this practice if they were wealthy enough Post emancipation editAfter the enslaved people were emancipated many states passed anti miscegenation laws which prohibited interracial marriage between whites and non whites But this did not stop some white men from taking sexual advantage of black women by using their social positions under the Jim Crow system and white supremacy or in other parts of the country by ordinary power and wealth dynamics The Chinese Tanka females were sold from Guangzhou to work as prostitutes for the overseas Chinese male community in the United States 11 During the California Gold Rush in the late 1840s Chinese merchants transported thousands of young Chinese girls including babies from China to the United States and sold them into sexual slavery within the red light district of San Francisco Girls could be bought for as cheap as 40 about 1104 in 2013 dollars in Guangzhou and sold for 400 about 11 040 in 2013 dollars in the United States Many of these girls were forced into opium addiction and lived their entire lives as prostitutes 12 13 Anglo American doctors claimed that opium smoking led to increased involvement in prostitution by young white women and to genetic contamination via miscegenation by Chinese men 14 Anti Chinese advocates believed America faced a dual dilemma opium smoking was ruining moral standards and Chinese labor was lowering wages and taking jobs away from European Americans 15 Slummers often frequented the brothels and opium dens of Chinatown in the late 1880s and early 1890s 16 However by the mid 1890s slummers rarely participated in Chinese brothels or opium smoking but instead were shown fake opium joints where Chinese actors and their white wives staged illicit scenes for the benefit of their audiences 16 A few captives from Native American tribes who were used as slaves were not freed when African American slaves were emancipated Ute Woman a Ute captured by the Arapaho and later sold to a Cheyenne was one example Used as a prostitute for sale to American soldiers at Cantonment in the Indian Territory she lived in slavery until about 1880 when she died of a hemorrhage resulting from excessive sexual intercourse 17 White slavery edit nbsp Ad warning about white slaveryBy the 19th century most of America s cities had a designated legally protected area of prostitution Increased urbanization and young women entering the workforce led to greater flexibility in courtship without supervision It is in this changing social sphere that the panic over white slavery began This term referred to women being coerced lured or kidnapped for the purposes of prostitution 18 19 Numerous communities appointed vice commissions to investigate the extent of local prostitution whether prostitutes participated in it willingly or were forced into it and the degree to which it was organized by any cartel type organizations The second significant action at the local levels was to close the brothels and the red light districts From 1910 to 1913 city after city withdrew this tolerance and forced the closing of their brothels Opposition to openly practiced prostitution had been growing steadily throughout the last decades of the 19th century The federal government s response to the moral panic was the Mann Act The purpose of the act was to make it a crime to coerce transportation of unwilling women The statute made it a crime to transport or cause to be transported or aid to assist in obtaining transportation for or to persuade induce entice or coerce a woman to travel 20 nbsp Ad warning about the use of ice cream parlors to traffic womenAccording to historian Mark Thomas Connelly a group of books and pamphlets appeared announcing a startling claim a pervasive and depraved conspiracy was at large in the land brutally trapping and seducing American girls into lives of enforced prostitution or white slavery These white slave narratives or white slave tracts began to circulate around 1909 21 114 Such narratives often portrayed innocent girls victimized by a huge secret and powerful conspiracy controlled by foreigners as they were drugged or imprisoned and forced into prostitution 21 116 This excerpt from The War on the White Slave Trade was written by the United States District Attorney in Chicago One thing should be made very clear to the girl who comes up to the city and that is that the ordinary ice cream parlor is very likely to be a spider s web for her entanglement This is perhaps especially true of those ice cream saloons and fruit stores kept by foreigners Scores of cases are on record where young girls have taken their first step towards white slavery in places of this character 22 Suffrage activists especially Harriet Burton Laidlaw 23 and Rose Livingston worked in New York City s Chinatown and in other cities to rescue young white and Chinese girls from forced prostitution and helped pass the Mann Act to make interstate sex trafficking a federal crime 20 Livingston publicly discussed her past as a prostitute and claimed to have been abducted and developed a drug problem as a sex slave in a Chinese man s home narrowly escaped and experienced a Christian conversion narrative 24 25 Other groups like the Woman s Christian Temperance Union and Hull House focused on children of prostitutes and poverty in community life while trying to pass protective legislation The American Purity Alliance also supported the Mann Act 22 In New York City the Travelers Aid Society of New York provided social services to women at train stations and piers in order to prevent trafficking 26 nbsp Rose Livingston known as the Angel of Chinatown worked to free slaves in New York City In 1910 the US Congress passed the White Slave Traffic Act of 1910 better known as the Mann Act which made it a felony to transport women across state borders for the purpose of prostitution or debauchery or for any other immoral purpose Its primary stated intent was to address prostitution immorality and human trafficking particularly where it was trafficking for the purposes of prostitution but the ambiguity of immoral purpose effectively criminalized interracial marriage and banned single women from crossing state borders for morally wrong acts As more women were being trafficked from foreign countries the US began passing immigration acts to curtail aliens from entering the country Several acts such as the Emergency Quota Act of 1921 and Immigration Act of 1924 were passed to prevent emigrants from Europe and Asia from entering the United States Following the banning of immigrants during the 1920s human trafficking was not considered a major issue until the 1990s 27 19 The 1921 Convention set new goals for international efforts to stem human trafficking primarily by giving the anti trafficking movement further official recognition as well as a bureaucratic apparatus to research and fight the problem The Advisory Committee on the Traffic of Women and Children was a permanent advisory committee of the League Its members were nine countries and several non governmental organizations An important development was the implementation of a system of annual reports of member countries Member countries formed their own centralized offices to track and report on trafficking of women and children 20 The advisory committee also worked to expand its research and intervention program beyond the United States and Europe In 1929 a need to expand into the Near East Asia Minor the Middle East and Asia was acknowledged An international conference of central authorities in Asia was planned for 1937 but no further action was taken during the late 1930s 28 Sex trafficking editMain article Sex trafficking in the United States Act 18 U S C 1591 or the Commercial Sex Act the US makes it illegal to recruit entice obtain provide move or harbor a person or to benefit from such activities knowing that the person will be caused to engage in commercial sex acts where the person is under 18 or where force fraud or coercion exists 29 30 Under the Bush Administration fighting sex slavery worldwide and domestically became a priority with an average of 100 million spent per year which substantially outnumbers the amount spent by other countries Before President Bush took office Congress passed the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000 TVPA The TVPA strengthened services to victims of violence law enforcements ability to reduce violence against women and children and education against human trafficking Also specified in the TVPA was a mandate to collect funds for the treatment of sex trafficking victims that provided them with shelter food education and financial grants Internationally the TVPA set standards that governments of other countries must follow in order to receive aid from the U S to fight human trafficking Once George W Bush took office in 2001 restricting sex trafficking became one of his primary humanitarian efforts The Attorney General under President Bush John Ashcroft strongly enforced the TVPA The Act was subsequently renewed in 2004 2006 and 2008 It established two stipulations an applicant has to meet in order to receive the benefits of a T Visa First a trafficked victim must prove admit to being trafficked and second must submit to prosecution of his or her trafficker In 2011 Congress failed to re authorize the Act The State Department publishes an annual Trafficking in Persons Report which examines the progress that the U S and other countries have made in destroying human trafficking businesses arresting the kingpins and rescuing the victims 31 32 33 See also editEnslaved women s resistance in the United States and Caribbean Marriage of enslaved people United States Children of the plantationReferences edit Kasum Eric 11 October 2010 Columbus Day True Legacy Cruelty and Slavery HuffPost Retrieved 28 May 2018 MacGuill Dan 26 May 2018 Did Christopher Columbus Seize Sell and Export Sex Slaves True A Facebook meme accurately describes some of Columbus s most brutal practices in the Caribbean Snopes Retrieved 26 May 2018 Christopher Columbus his life his work his remains as revealed by original printed and manuscript records 1903 Hispaniola Genocide Studies Program gsp yale edu Retrieved 2022 12 29 Christopher Columbus Letter of the Admiral to the quondam nurse of the Prince John written near the end of the year 1500 Select Letters of Christopher Columbus London Hakluyt Society 1870 p 165 Marable Manning How capitalism underdeveloped Black America problems in race political economy and society South End Press 2000 p 72 Marable ibid p 72 Work Projects Administration Slave Narratives A Folk History of Slavery in the United States from Interviews with Former Slaves Arkansas Narratives Part 6 Kessinger Publishing 2004 p 154 Baptist Edward E 2001 Cuffy Fancy Maids and One Eyed Men Rape Commodification and the Domestic Slave Trade in the United States The American Historical Review 106 5 1619 1650 doi 10 2307 2692741 JSTOR 2692741 Katy F Morlas La Madame et la Mademoiselle graduate thesis in history Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College 2003 Elizabeth Wheeler Andrew Katharine Caroline Bushnell 2006 Heathen Slaves and Christian Rulers Echo Library p 13 ISBN 1 4068 0431 2 or among Chinese residents as their concubines or to be sold for export to Singapore San Francisco or Australia Albert S Evans 1873 Chapter 12 A la California Sketch of Life in the Golden State San Francisco A L Bancroft and Company Archived from the original on 2008 05 11 Rogers Jacquie 2010 08 25 Unusual Historicals Tragic Tales Chinese Slave Girls of the Barbary Coast Unusual Historicals Retrieved 2022 12 29 Ahmad p 47 48 Ahmad p 51 a b Heap p 34 Berthrong Donald J 1976 The Cheyenne and Arapaho Ordeal Reservation and Agency Life in the Indian Territory 1875 to 1907 University of Oklahoma Press p 124 ISBN 0 8061 1277 8 Matsubara Hiroyuki 2006 The 1910s Anti Prostitution Movement and the Transformation of American Political Culture The Japanese Journal of American Studies 17 a b Donovan Brian 2006 White Slave Crusades Race Gender and Anti vice Activism 1887 1917 University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 09100 1 a b c Brian K Landsberg Major Acts of Congress Macmillan Reference USA The Gale Group 2004 251 253 Print a b Connelly Mark Thomas 2018 The Response to Prostitution in the Progressive Era Chapel Hill UNC Press Books ISBN 9781469650142 a b Bell Ernest Albert 1910 Fighting the traffic in young girls or War on the white slave trade a complete and detailed account of the shameless traffic in young girls University of Illinois Urbana Champaign Chicago G S Ball We ve moved oasis lib harvard edu Retrieved 2022 12 29 Lui Mary Ting Yi 1 September 2009 Saving young girls from Chinatown white slavery and woman suffrage 1910 1920 Journal of the History of Sexuality Massotta Jodie Decades of Reform Prostitutes Feminists and the War on White Slavery Archived 2014 07 15 at the Wayback Machine Diss University of Vermont 2013 Print Cimino Eric Winter 2016 The Travelers Aid Society Moral Reform and Social Work in New York City 1907 1916 New York History 97 1 34 54 doi 10 1353 nyh 2016 0003 S2CID 165850174 Cimino Eric 2012 On the Border Line of Tragedy White Slavery Moral Protection and the Travelers Aid Society of New York 1885 1917 Ph D Diss Stony Brook University Doezema Jo Loose women or lost women The re emergence of the myth of white slavery in contemporary discourses of trafficking in women Gender issues 18 1 1999 23 50 Elizabeth Faue The Emergence of Modern America 1990 to 1923 Encyclopedia of American History 2003 pp 169 170 Print Stop Sex Trafficking Archived from the original on 2011 04 27 Retrieved 2010 03 10 Victims Of Trafficking And Violence Protection Act of 2000 PDF Soderlund Gretchen Running from the rescuers new US crusades against sex trafficking and the rhetoric of abolition nwsa Journal 17 3 2005 64 87 Feingold David A Human trafficking Foreign Policy 2005 26 32 Horning A et al 2014 Trafficking in Persons Report A Game of Risk International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice 38 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of sexual slavery in the United States amp oldid 1182052235, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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