According to World Without Exploitation, the majority of women and girls who are survivors of sex trafficking are survivors of childhood sexual abuse.[1]
Sexual abuse, emotional abuse, and/or physical abuse increase a child’s vulnerability to sexual exploitation.[2]
Youth who experience sexual abuse are “28 times more likely to be arrested for prostitution at some point in their lives than children who [did] not.”[3]
Among girls who are survivors of sex trafficking, a history of child sexual abuse is the most common characteristic.[4]
The State Department’s 2021 Trafficking in Persons report identifies “intimate partner violence or domestic violence” as factors that increase an individual’s vulnerability to human trafficking.[5]
The vast majority of human trafficking survivors experience multiple forms of abuse, such as domestic violence and sexual assault.[6]
Many survivors of trafficking also suffer multiple forms of abuse at the hands of their attacker, including sexual violence.[7]
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