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Risk Factors Related to Sexual Exploitation for a Cohort of Female Sex Workers in Bogotá

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Published
Publication date22/07/2022
Host publicationSex Work, Labour and Relations: New Directions and Reflections
EditorsTeela Sanders, Kathryn McGarry, Paul Ryan
Place of PublicationCham
PublisherPalgrave Macmillan
Pages209-242
Number of pages34
ISBN (electronic)9783031046056
ISBN (print)9783031046049
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Publication series

NamePalgrave Advances in Sex Work Studies (PASWS)
PublisherPalgrave

Abstract

This chapter explores structural, environmental, and individual factors associated with reporting sexual exploitation among a sample of female sex workers in Bogotá. It examines secondary survey data on paid sexual activity with 2684 sex workers conducted in 2017. Multivariable logistic regression was used to test for associations with self-reported victimisation.

Findings reveal that neither Venezuelan nor internal migrants were more at risk than locals in reporting sexual exploitation. The associations with payment per client, having graduated high school, having a post-secondary education, and working on the street were also not significant. Instead, reporting police harassment (AOR = 5.70, p 
These findings challenge the conflation between migration, sex work, and sexual exploitation by demonstrating that migration is not a risk factor to victimisation and that sex workers do not have the same risk of reporting exploitation. This chapter concludes that legislation in Colombia facilitates police harassment and stigma against sex work which are associated with an increase in the risk of sexual exploitation.