Commercial Child Sexual Exploitation: "The Most Hidden Form of Child Abuse," Says NASW Member Richard Estes
Press Conference held at NASW Headquarters -- September 10, 2001
WASHINGTON—Tens of thousands of
U.S., Mexican and Canadian children and youths become victims of juvenile
pornography, prostitution and trafficking each year. So significant is the
problem that even most law-enforcement and child-welfare officials do not
realize its scope.
"Child sexual exploitation is the most hidden form of child
abuse in the U.S. and North America today. It is the nation's least recognized
epidemic," said Richard J. Estes, a University of Pennsylvania professor of
social work and the author of "The Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children in
the U.S., Canada and Mexico." Neil Weiner of Penn's Center for the Study of
Youth Policy co-authored the international report.
The three-year project was funded by the National Institute
of Justice of the U.S. Department of Justice, the W.T. Grant Foundation, the
Fund for Nonviolence and the Research Foundation of the University of
Pennsylvania. Estes reported that his and Weiner's research identified 17 groups
of children in the U.S. who are at "substantial risk" of being sexually
exploited.
"The largest of these groups are runaway, thrownaway and
other homeless American children who use 'survival sex' to acquire food,
shelter, clothing and other things needed to survive on America's streets,"
Estes said. "These children are solicited for sex repeatedly by men, many of
whom are married and have children of their own," Estes said. "Like other groups
of sexually exploited persons, street children are exposed to violence, drug
abuse, rape and, sometimes, even murder at the hands of the pimps, 'customers'
and traffickers that make up their world."
Estes also reported that some U.S. children engage in
commercial sex while living at home. "The majority of these children trade sex
for money or for more expensive
clothes and other consumer goods. Most of the 'customers' of
these children are members of their own junior and senior high school peer
groups," he said. Many of these children live in secure middle-class homes, and
few parents are aware of their children's involvement in pornography or
prostitution. This group also includes American youths who cross into Canada or
Mexico in pursuit of cheaper drugs, alcohol and sex. Mexican authorities report
that border towns are little more than "cantinas for America's youth," Estes
said.
The sexual exploitation of children is not limited to
particular racial, ethnic or socioeconomic groups, according to the Penn
professors' report, although children from poorer families appear to be at a
somewhat higher risk of commercial sexual exploitation. In fact, most of the
street children encountered in the study were Caucasian youths who had run away
from middle-class homes.
But, "a disproportionate number of street youth have
histories of recurrent physical or sexual abuse at home and took to the streets
in a desperate effort to bring their abuse to an end," Estes said. "It is ironic
that running away from home increases their risk of physical violence and sexual
abuse."
Many street youths use drugs "to deal with the emotional
pain of being sexually victimized at home and, once on the streets, by four to
10 'customers' a day," Estes said.
Just as the exploited children come from all parts of
society, so do the perpetrators of sex crimes against children. These sexual
predators include relatives and other adults known and trusted by the children
or their families.
"Despite popular notions to the contrary," Estes said,
"strangers commit fewer than four percent of all the sexual assaults against
children." In the case of street children, their "customers" include pedophiles,
pederasts, pimps and traffickers.
Other customers are transient males, including members of
the military, long-haul truck drivers, seasonal workers, conventioneers and sex
tourists. "In the U.S., child sexual exploitation affects as many boys as girls,
but boys are less well served by human-service and law-enforcement systems
because of the widespread belief that boys are better able than are girls to
fend for themselves," Estes reported. Given the high levels of emotional
dysfunction, drug abuse and violence that exists for boys living on America's
streets, however, this is not true. In time, many boys shift from being victims
of sexual abuse to victimizing other boys and girls as pimps and
traffickers.
Other groups of commercially sexually exploited children in
the U.S. include girls in gangs; transgender street youths; foreign children
brought into the U.S. illegally, especially from Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe
and elsewhere in the Americas; and U.S. youth who are trafficked nationally and
internationally as part of organized sex crime rings. Estes and Weiner have
identified an 11-point action agenda focused on eliminating the further
commercial sexual exploitation of America's youth.
"There is an urgent need," Estes said, "for systematic
public and professional education on the causes, nature and extent of child
sexual exploitation in the United States. The situation in the U.S. must be
understood within the broader content of child sexual exploitation occurring
throughout both the North American region and the rest of the world. Only
through such understanding will the U.S. be able to act decisively in protecting
her children from such heinous abuse."
He also called for earlier identification and more intensive
supervision of sexually offending adults and juveniles as urgent priorities in
protecting children from sexual exploitation.
Full report is available at http://caster.ssw.upenn.edu/~restes/CSEC.htm
CONTACTS:
Ron Ozio, University of Pennsylvania 215-898-8658 (office)
or ozio@pobox.upenn.edu
Gail Woods-Waller, National Association of Social Workers
202-336-8236 or gwaller@naswdc.org
Lahne Mattas-Curry, National Association of Social Workers
202-336-8228 or lcurry@naswdc.org
The National Association of Social Workers (NASW), in
Washington, DC, is the largest membership organization of professional social
workers with 153,000 members. It promotes, develops and protects the practice of
social work and social workers. NASW also seeks to enhance the well being of
individuals, families and communities through its work and through its
advocacy.
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