Traditional Data Distort Our View of Prostitution
Notes for my presentation during the panel "Demystifying Sex
Work,"
When Sex Works: International Conference on Prostitution
and Other Sex Work
September 27-29, 1996, UQAM, Montréal (Qc)
Frances M. Shaver
Department de sociologie et d'anthropologie
Univeristé Concordia
Over-reliance on official crime statistics, police reports,
as well as clinical and social agency samples provides an
incomplete and misleading portrait of prostitution and
prostitutes. Field study interviews with sex workers present a
different picture. Unfortunately, very few have been conducted
in Canada and most -- like the 10 field studies conducted for
the Justice Department -- are little known. (1) When results
from the official and anecdotal data are compared to these field
studies, it becomes clear that the former distort the picture by
grossly over-estimating women's involvement, misrepresenting the
conditions of work, and exaggerating or overstating the
disadvantaged backgrounds of sex workers. (2)
The Sex Work Research Project at Concordia University is one
example of a field study approach. (3) During field work
conducted over four summers in three different cities in North
America (San Francisco, Montreal and Toronto), we interviewed
325 women, men and transgender persons involved in street
prostitution. This research has provided information which is
empirically grounded, strictly sampled, and more representative
of street prostitution than crime statistics, police reports,
and clinical samples alone.
Our field work strategy entailed a week or two of
introductions and public relations activity that served to
legitimate both the study and our role as researchers. We worked
in pairs, introducing ourselves to people who appeared to be
working. Introductions were straight forward and always
accompanied with an open, extended hand and direct eye contact:
"Hi, I'm Fran Shaver, this is my assistant Jane. We're letting
people know about the research we are conducting over the next
few weeks." We then explained the nature of the study and handed
out my university business card. We usually exchanged a few more
words before moving on.
Subjects were later drawn into the study by encouraging them
to help us identify existing stroll boundaries, friendly
restaurants, and the population characteristics of the regular
and non-regular workers. This permitted us to validate our field
observations, legitimate our note-taking while in the field, and
enhance the accuracy of the data base and sampling technique. In
order to preserve the integrity of the data base, we only
interviewed people we had seen working on several different
occasions and who were not under the influence of alcohol or
drugs at the time of asking. We also took care to ensure that
the distinguishing characteristics of those interviewed
reflected as much as possible the characteristics of the stroll
population in question.
The results from such field study samples present a different
portrait of prostitution and prostitutes than other sources.
Enforcement patterns inherant in police activities focus almost
exclusively on the public manifestation of sex work: street
prostitution. In Canada as elsewhere, however, field study
estimates indicate that it represents only a small proportion of
the market. Estimates vary from 10% to 15% of the total in the
United States, to 30% of the total in England. According to
studies conducted in Toronto in 1983 and 1992, street
prostitution represents only 20% of all the prostitution in the
city. (4) Reports from other Canadian cities are similar.
Crime statistics also imply that women are much more likely
than men to be involved in prostitution. Field studies show that
women represent only a very small proportion of the individuals
involved. Conservative estimates based on the ratio of female to
male street prostitutes in Montreal in 1991 (4:1) and the
average number of male clients they service each week (20 and 10
respectively) indicate that only 4% of those involved (or at
least potentially involved) in communicating for the purpose of
prostitution are women. The remainder -- a full 96% -- are men,
and of those, the vast majority (99%) are clients. (5)
The tendency to see prostitution as a female crime and
prostitutes as female, conceals three important gender
differences which are evident in the field studies. First, men
do sex work: estimates of men involved in street prostitution
alone vary from 10% to 25%. Second, male hustlers earn
substantially less than do female prostitutes. The average
weekly earnings of the men we interviewed in Montreal was $600 -
$800 compared to $1800 - $2000 for women. Finally, male hustlers
run less risk from on-the-job hazards than do either women or
transgender prostitutes. In all four of our samples they report
fewer rapes and fewer beatings than either of the other two
groups and are less likely to be arrested for
prostitution-related offenses. When they are assaulted, it is
more likely to be related to their alleged homosexuality than
their involvement in sex work. (6)
Gender differences prevail with respect to the pimp factor as
well -- they are rarely if ever involved in same sex
prostitution. Even so, findings from all the Justice Department
field studies indicate that the extent of pimping is
exaggerated. Many women work for themselves: 62% in Vancouver,
50% in Toronto, and 69% in Montreal. The presence and influence
of pimps is more extensive in the Maritimes (where fewer than
25% worked for themselves) and on the Prairies (where most of
the white women but only a few of the Native women did so). (7)
Our data from Montreal and Toronto indicate that between 50% -
70% work for themselves. In San Francisco all but 4% said they
worked for themselves.
The data from police and court samples, as well as clinical
and agency data, also portray prostitutes as young, single,
addicted, under-educated, and from backgrounds with a history of
poverty and abuse. The first three impressions are partially
corroborated by field studies. Regardless of their gender,
prostitutes are young and begin their careers at an early age:
the mean age of the prostitutes interviewed for the Justice
Department varied from 22 to 25, depending on the region, and
the majority began their careers between the ages of 16 and 20.
Although young, this is far above the 13 and 14 year olds
emphasized in the popular media.
The majority of prostitutes we interviewed were single.
However, this status was more likely to be the case for men than
for women (fewer than 10% of the men across all four samples
were married or cohabitating compared to one third to just over
half of the women). In addition, the women were more likely than
the men to share in the financial support of a child or another
adult (excluding pimp). This female responsibility is also
reflected in the Justice Department data: in Vancouver, 29%
supported children financially; on the Prairies, 68% had
children; in the Atlantic provinces, 35% reported having at
least on child.
The data regarding substance abuse vary substantially by
region and gender. It is highest in the Atlantic provinces (50%
of both women and men admitted to drug abuse) and the lowest in
Quebec (only 16% were heavy users). On the Prairies, 42% said
they had a problem with illicit drugs. The gender breakdown
available from our Montreal data indicate that the use of
illicit drugs is extremely low among the women (less than 7%
used hard drugs such as heroin, crack and other forms of cocaine
in the week before the interview), but high among the men (just
over 50% used such drugs in the same period).
At first reading, the data we collected regarding level of
education and family background also tended to reinforce the
legal, clinical and social agency portrait of persons involved
in prostitution. Most had not gone beyond high school: in fact,
43% of the women and 50% of the men we interviewed in Montreal
in 1991 had not completed high school. The 1984 field studies
reported similar levels of educational attainment. Up to one
third of the sex workers indicated that they came from poor or
needy homes: in 1984, 38% in Quebec and 16% in Vancouver stated
their origins were poor. A gender breakdown on our 1991 Montreal
sampled revealed that the men were more likely to come from poor
homes (30%) than the women (17%). These traits do not
necessarily set them apart from the Canadian population at
large, however. Overall in 1989, 37% of adult Canadians had less
than a high school diploma. In the Atlantic provinces, Quebec,
Manitoba, and Saskatchewan, the proportions of individuals with
less than high school were even higher, ranging from 41% to 48%.
The poverty rate for Canadian families betwen 1984 and 1986 --
when many of our respondents left home -- was 14.5%; the rate
increases to 60% for single-parent mothers with children under
18. Since a high proportion of the respondents in the field
studies conducted for the Justice Department indicated they grew
up in single-parent families, this latter figure is probably the
more appropriate statistic to use when comparing family
backgrounds. (8)
Many sex workers also recollected that they had been victims
of abuse. In the Vancouver study, 67% stated they had been
victims of physical violence in the family and 33% had suffered
sexual abuse. In the Maritimes, 40% said they were victims of
physical abuse, 28% said they had been forced to have sexual
relations with one or more members of the family and 33% had
been victims of rape before entering prostitution. (9) A history
of violence and abuse may not be peculiar to those entering
prostitution, however. Results from a national population survey
indicate that 54% of th female respondents and 22% of the male
respondents had been victims of unwanted sexual acts. (10)
Although these data are somewhat problematic in that the
definition of abuse included a wide variety of sexual acts --
some more serious than others -- they do demonstrate that more
research must be done before concluding that the level of sexual
and physical abuse of working prostitutes when they were
children is higher than the level of abuse in the general
population.
These findings do not challenge the validity or the integrity
of the more traditional data bases. They do, however, indicate
that using them as the exclusive or even primary source of data
is likely to result in inappropriate social and legal policy
interventions. Traditional data must be combined with field
samples in order to provide a more representative portrait of
the situation. Not all prostitutes are victims and not all
prostitution involves coercion: the majority of prostitutes work
for themselves and do not necessarily have less education or
more abusive backgrounds than others. More importantly, the
differences between female and male prostitutes regarding job
hazards and earning power suggest that the most undesirable
aspects of prostitution are linked to broader social problems
rather than the commercialization of sex. These findings should
challenge us to reevaluate our thinking about prostitutes and
prostitution. If we hope to improve the working conditions,
reduce the injustice related to the service, and provide
acceptable alternatives to street prostitution, we must do so
with an accurate view of the situation.
Endnotes
The studies conducted in 1984 include: N. Crook, A
Report on Prostitution in the Atlantic Provinces; J.
Fleishman. A Report on Prostitution in Ontario; R. Gemme at
al., A Report on Prostitution in Quebec; M. Lautt, A Report
on Prostitution in the Prairies; J. Lowman, Vancouver Field
Study of Prostitution: Research Notes; and D. Sanfacon,
Prostitution in Canada: A Research Report. The studies
conducted on 1989 include: A Brannigan, L. Knafla, and C.
Levy, Street Prostitution: Assessing the Impact of the Law
-- Calgary, Regina, Winnipeg; R. Gemme, N. Payment, and L.
Malefant, Street Prostitution: Assessing the Impact of the
Law -- Montreal; F. Graves, Street Prostitution: Assessing
the Impact of the Law -- Halifax; J. Lowman, Street
Prostitution: Assessing the Impact of the Law -- Vancouver;
S. Moyer and P.J. Carrington, Street Prostitution: Assessing
the Impact of the Law -- Toronto; Canada, Department of
Justice, Street Prostitution: Assessing the Impact of the
Law -- Synthesis Report. All were published by the
Department of Justice Canada, Ottawa.
For more details see F. M. Shaver (1993)
"Prostitution: A Female Crime?" Pp. 153-173 in Ellen
Alderberg and Claudia Currie (eds) In Conflict with the Law:
Women and the Canadian Justice System. Vancouver: Press Gang
Publishers.
Support for the primary research described here is
provided through grants from SSHRC, FCAR, and Concordia
University.
Shaver, 1993 p. 157
Shaver, 1993 p. 155
Shaver, F.M. (1994) "The Regulation of Prostitution:
Avoiding the Morality Traps." Canadian Journal of Law and
Society 9(1): 123-145 at p. 138.
Shaver, 1993 p. 161
Shaver, 1993 p. 160 and note 25
Shaver, 1993 p. 159 and note 17
Shaver, 1993 p. 160 and notes 30 and 31
Original link:
http://www.walnet.org/csis/papers/shaver-distort.html
|