MyData:What Is MyData? | Login/Account Info | Download Saved Files | Logout

NACJD home 

Description & Citation--Study No. 3438

Bibliographic Description

ICPSR Study No.:3438
 
Title:International and Domestic Trends in Sex Trafficking of Women in the United States, 1999-2000
 
Principal Investigator(s):Janice G. Raymond, Coalition Against Trafficking Women
 
  Donna M. Hughes, Coalition Against Trafficking Women
 
Funding Agency:United States Department of Justice. National Institute of Justice.
 
Grant Number:98-WT-VX-0032
 
Bibliographic Citation:Raymond, Janice G., and Donna M. Hughes. INTERNATIONAL AND DOMESTIC TRENDS IN SEX TRAFFICKING OF WOMEN IN THE UNITED STATES, 1999-2000 [Computer file]. ICPSR version. Amherst, MA: Coalition Against Trafficking Women [producer], 2002. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2003.
 

Scope of Study

Summary:This study by the Coalition Against Trafficking Women was the first to research both contemporary international and domestic trafficking of women for sexual exploitation in the United States and to include primary research information from interviews with trafficked and prostituted women in the sex industry. Telephone and personal interviews were conducted with people who had experience with or knowledge of sex trafficking in the United States. This data collection consists of the verbatim questions and responses from the following groups of individuals who were interviewed: (1) international and United States women who had been or were in the sex industry in the United States, (2) law enforcement officials who had experience and expertise in sex-industry related cases or immigration, (3) social service workers who provided services to women in prostitution or might have come into contact with women from the sex industry and those providing services to immigrant populations, and (4) health care workers who provided services to women in prostitution or who may have come into contact with women in the sex industry. The research framework was developed to follow the path of trafficked women from their hometown, through their experiences in the sex industry, to their present place in life. Information was collected on trafficked women's backgrounds, roles and activities while in the sex industry, how they were controlled, and how they coped with their situations. Respondents were also asked about experiences with recruiters, traffickers, pimps, and customers. Additional information was gathered on the respondents' views on policies regarding trafficking and prostitution, the organization of the sex industry, and health and legal aspects of the business. Questionnaires for each group of interviewees were constructed according to the topics about which each group would most likely have knowledge or experience.
 
Subject Term(s):prostitution, sex offenses, sex trafficking, sexual exploitation, women
 
Geographic Coverage:United States
 
Time Period:1999 - 2000
 
Date(s) of Collection:1999 - 2000
 
Unit of Observation:Individuals.
 
Universe:Parts 1-16: International women who had been or were in the sex industry in the United States. Parts 17-41: United States women who had been or were in the sex industry in the United States. Parts 42-66: Law enforcement officials who had experience and expertise in sex-industry related cases or immigration in the United States. Parts 67-101: Social service workers who provided services to women in prostitution or who may have come in contact with women from the sex industry and those providing services to immigrant populations in the United States. Parts 102-107: Health care workers who provided services to women in prostitution or who may have come into contact with women in the sex industry.
 
Data Type:survey data
 
Data Collection Notes:(1) The number of data files in this collection does not match the number of interviewees described in the Final Report for this project because some data files contain interviews with multiple respondents. (2) The number of data files in this collection does not match the number of interviews described in the Final Report for this project because ICPSR did not include duplicate interviews in this collection. (3) The data files were converted to plain ASCII text from Microsoft Word documents by ICPSR. Some formatting from the MSWord files were not retained in the conversion. Data users are strongly encouraged to use the data files in conjunction with the PDF data collection instrument provided as part of this data collection to distinguish question text and interviewer prompts from actual responses from interviewees. In particular, data users should note that many of the closed-ended questions required a discrete answer from the respondents, such as "Yes," "No," or "Don't know." Responses to such questions may be present in the data file in one of three ways: (1) interviewers typed the respondent's answer after the question, (2) all possible responses are present for a question and the respondents' answers are designated by an "X" to the left of the given response, or (3) all possible responses are present but none is marked, indicating that the question was not answered. (4) ICPSR blanked certain identifying information, such as names and locations. This information has been replaced by a generic identifier in brackets, such as [name]. (5) The user guide and data collection instruments are provided by ICPSR as Portable Document Format (PDF) files. The PDF file format was developed by Adobe Systems Incorporated and can be accessed using PDF reader software, such as the Adobe Acrobat Reader. Information on how to obtain a copy of the Acrobat Reader is provided on the ICPSR Web site.
 

Methodology

Purpose of the Study:The aim of this research was to broadly investigate the international and domestic trafficking in women in the United States. The specific goals were to: (1) document known cases and information on sex trafficking in the United States, (2) establish a research framework for studying sex trafficking in the United States, (3) describe connections between the supply of women trafficked from abroad and within the United States and the demand created by the sex industries, (4) describe local sex industries and their involvement in sex trafficking and prostitution, (5) describe linkages between international and domestic trafficking and sex industries, (6) describe regional differences in sex trafficking and sex industries in the United States, and (7) describe the social consequences of sex trafficking in terms of violence, crime, health, and other human costs.
 
Study Design:To gather information on sex trafficking and the sex industry in the United States as effectively and efficiently as possible, target sampling was used, in which individuals with knowledge on trafficking and the sex industry were interviewed. The goal was to gather information from the most informed experts on the topic, not to do a broad survey of knowledge and attitudes. The data files in this collection consist of the verbatim questions and responses from the following groups of individuals who were interviewed: (1) international (Parts 1-16) and United States (Parts 17-41) women who had been or were in the sex industry in the United States, (2) law enforcement officials who had experience and expertise in sex-industry related cases or immigration (Parts 42-66), (3) social service workers who provided services to women in prostitution or might have come into contact with women from the sex industry and those providing services to immigrant populations (Parts 67-101), and (4) health care workers who provided services to women in prostitution or who may have come into contact with women in the sex industry (Parts 102-107). A research framework was developed to follow the path of trafficked women from their hometown, through their experiences in the sex industry, to their present place in life. Interviewees were asked about women's backgrounds before being recruited or trafficked into the sex industry, about the methods used to recruit them, whether and how they were moved around while in the sex industry, how they were initiated into the roles and activities they had to carry out, how they were controlled while in the sex industry, and how they coped with and resisted the conditions under which they lived. Interviewees were asked for their recommendations for policies on trafficking and prostitution. Since the women interviewed most likely had daily contact with other women in prostitution, they were asked for their observations and knowledge about other women (possibly trafficked women) in the sex industry. Women were asked about their experiences with recruiters, traffickers, and pimps and the men who buy them in the sex industry. They were asked about their health and well-being while in the sex industry and after getting out. Interviewees were also asked about the operation of the sex industry in their city or region. They were asked about who the traffickers were, how they operated, and how the sex industry was organized in that area. The questionnaire used in this study was constructed and organized by topics related to the path trafficked women might follow and the operation of the sex industry in which they were exploited. Questionnaires for each group of interviewees were constructed according to the topics about which each group would most likely have knowledge or experience. The questionnaires were composed of open- and closed-ended questions on each topic.
 
Sample:To gather information on sex trafficking and the sex industry in the United States as effectively and efficiently as possible, target sampling was used, in which individuals with knowledge of trafficking and the sex industry were interviewed.
 
Data Source:telephone and personal interviews
 
Description of Variables:inap.
 
Response Rates:Not applicable.
 
Presence of Common Scales:None.
 
Extent of Processing:ICPSR reformatted the data and documentation.
 

Access and Availability

Note:A list of the data formats available for this study can be found in the summary of holdings. Detailed file-level information (such as record length, case count, and variable count) is listed in the file manifest.
 
Restrictions:The data are restricted from general dissemination. Users interested in obtaining these data must complete a Data Transfer Agreement Form and specify the reasons for the request. A copy of the Data Transfer Agreement Form can be requested by calling 800-999-0960 or 734-647-5000. The Data Transfer Agreement Form is also available as a Portable Document Format (PDF) file from the NACJD Web site at http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/NACJD/Private/private.pdf (link). Completed forms should be returned to: Director, National Archive of Criminal Justice Data, Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research, Institute for Social Research, P.O. Box 1248, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1248, or by fax: 734-647-8200.
 
Original ICPSR Release:2003-09-10
 
Version History:The last update of this study occurred on 2003-09-10.
 
  2006-03-30 - File UG3438.ALL.PDF was removed from any previous datasets and flagged as a study-level file, so that it will accompany all downloads.
 
Dataset(s):
  • DS1: Interview with International Woman 1
  • DS2: Interview with International Woman 2
  • DS3: Interview with International Woman 3
  • DS4: Interview with International Woman 4
  • DS5: Interview with International Woman 5
  • DS6: Interview with International Woman 6
  • DS7: Interview with International Woman 7
  • DS8: Interview with International Woman 8
  • DS9: Interview with International Woman 9
  • DS10: Interview with International Woman 10
  • DS11: Interview with International Woman 11
  • DS12: Interview with International Woman 12
  • DS13: Interview with International Woman 13
  • DS14: Interview with International Woman 14
  • DS15: Interview with International Woman 15
  • DS16: Interview with International Woman 16
  • DS17: Interview with United States Woman 1
  • DS18: Interview with United States Woman 2
  • DS19: Interview with United States Woman 3
  • DS20: Interview with United States Woman 4
  • DS21: Interview with United States Woman 5
  • DS22: Interview with United States Woman 6
  • DS23: Interview with United States Woman 7
  • DS24: Interview with United States Woman 8
  • DS25: Interview with United States Woman 9
  • DS26: Interview with United States Woman 10
  • DS27: Interview with United States Woman 11
  • DS28: Interview with United States Woman 12
  • DS29: Interview with United States Woman 13
  • DS30: Interview with United States Woman 14
  • DS31: Interview with United States Woman 15
  • DS32: Interview with United States Woman 16
  • DS33: Interview with United States Woman 17
  • DS34: Interview with United States Woman 18
  • DS35: Interview with United States Woman 19
  • DS36: Interview with United States Woman 20
  • DS37: Interview with United States Woman 21
  • DS38: Interview with United States Woman 22
  • DS39: Interview with United States Woman 23
  • DS40: Interview with United States Woman 24
  • DS41: Interview with United States Woman 25
  • DS42: Interview with Law Enforcement 1
  • DS43: Interview with Law Enforcement 2
  • DS44: Interview with Law Enforcement 3
  • DS45: Interview with Law Enforcement 4
  • DS46: Interview with Law Enforcement 5
  • DS47: Interview with Law Enforcement 6
  • DS48: Interview with Law Enforcement 7
  • DS49: Interview with Law Enforcement 8
  • DS50: Interview with Law Enforcement 9
  • DS51: Interview with Law Enforcement 10
  • DS52: Interview with Law Enforcement 11
  • DS53: Interview with Law Enforcement 12
  • DS54: Interview with Law Enforcement 13
  • DS55: Interview with Law Enforcement 14
  • DS56: Interview with Law Enforcement 15
  • DS57: Interview with Law Enforcement 16
  • DS58: Interview with Law Enforcement 17
  • DS59: Interview with Law Enforcement 18
  • DS60: Interview with Law Enforcement 19
  • DS61: Interview with Law Enforcement 20
  • DS62: Interview with Law Enforcement 21
  • DS63: Interview with Law Enforcement 22
  • DS64: Interview with Law Enforcement 23
  • DS65: Interview with Law Enforcement 24
  • DS66: Interview with Law Enforcement 25
  • DS67: Interview with Social Service Provider 1
  • DS68: Interview with Social Service Provider 2
  • DS69: Interview with Social Service Provider 3
  • DS70: Interview with Social Service Provider 4
  • DS71: Interview with Social Service Provider 5
  • DS72: Interview with Social Service Provider 6
  • DS73: Interview with Social Service Provider 7
  • DS74: Interview with Social Service Provider 8
  • DS75: Interview with Social Service Provider 9
  • DS76: Interview with Social Service Provider 10
  • DS77: Interview with Social Service Provider 11
  • DS78: Interview with Social Service Provider 12
  • DS79: Interview with Social Service Provider 13
  • DS80: Interview with Social Service Provider 14
  • DS81: Interview with Social Service Provider 15
  • DS82: Interview with Social Service Provider 16
  • DS83: Interview with Social Service Provider 17
  • DS84: Interview with Social Service Provider 18
  • DS85: Interview with Social Service Provider 19
  • DS86: Interview with Social Service Provider 20
  • DS87: Interview with Social Service Provider 21
  • DS88: Interview with Social Service Provider 22
  • DS89: Interview with Social Service Provider 23
  • DS90: Interview with Social Service Provider 24
  • DS91: Interview with Social Service Provider 25
  • DS92: Interview with Social Service Provider 26
  • DS93: Interview with Social Service Provider 27
  • DS94: Interview with Social Service Provider 28
  • DS95: Interview with Social Service Provider 29
  • DS96: Interview with Social Service Provider 30
  • DS97: Interview with Social Service Provider 31
  • DS98: Interview with Social Service Provider 32
  • DS99: Interview with Social Service Provider 33
  • DS100: Interview with Social Service Provider 34
  • DS101: Interview with Social Service Provider 35
  • DS102: Interview with Health Care Worker 1
  • DS103: Interview with Health Care Worker 2
  • DS104: Interview with Health Care Worker 3
  • DS105: Interview with Health Care Worker 4
  • DS106: Interview with Health Care Worker 5
  • DS107: Interview with Health Care Worker 6
 

 

NACJD