The Reconsecration of the Self: A Qualitative Analysis of Sex Trafficking Survivors' Experience of the Body

Violence Against Women. 2024 Jun;30(8):1842-1865. doi: 10.1177/10778012241239948. Epub 2024 Mar 20.

Abstract

The understudied bodily harm women experience after commercial sex (CS) may be partially explained by the prominence of Cartesian mind-body dualism in psychological science. Accordingly, we qualitatively explored the mind-body relationship among 79 female sex trafficking survivors. Survivors reported long-term negative alterations in feelings about the body, sex, and physical touch posttrafficking and these negative outcomes did not differ across women who self-perceived as consenting and women who self-perceived as forced. Implications for future research are presented, particularly on measuring dehumanization in CS which contributes to extensive harm even in the absence of physical aggression.

Keywords: commercial sex; human trafficking; mind–body relationship; sex trafficking.