| Sex
Tourism in Latin America |
An
interesting article about sex tourism in Latin America
Sex Tourism in Latin America
by
Ann Barger Hannum
Sex
tourism—travel to engage in sex for money—shares a lengthy
and sometimes colorful history with that of adventure travel and
tourism in general. Literature investigating early travel involving
sexual encounters includes stories dating to explorations by Columbus
in the 15th century. Considerable research supports the theory that,
along with potatoes, tobacco, and other commodities, Columbus and
his crew also brought the first cases of syphilis to the New World.
Among other early journeys abroad that were enhanced by sexual revelries
were the “Grand Tours,” trips taken across Europe by
young aristocratic men and women during the during the 18th and
19th centuries in order to broaden their understanding of culture
and the arts. These adventurous young people often supplemented
their cultural experience with that of a sexual nature through liaisons
with people they met while traveling.
When
travel opportunities opened up to a growing segment of the middle
class in the mid-19th century, including that of the United States,
sex tourism evolved into a common activity. As many European countries
became wealthier, clients expanded their search for sex into other
regions, such as the Caribbean and northern Africa, where prices
for sex were more moderate. The growth of sex tourism has also had
a strong correlation with military conquest and the presence of
foreign military bases. Prostitution proliferated near British military
bases worldwide during the latter part of the 18th century and emerged
more recently near US military bases in Korea, the Philippines,
Thailand, and Vietnam, establishing these areas as preferred destinations
for sex. In the 1940s and 1950s, Cuba
was the destination of large numbers of American male sex tourists.
Prostitution became illegal after the revolution but started to
flourish again in the 1990s, when economic conditions forced Castro
to reopen the tourism industry.
The
expansion of sex tourism has continued unabated, in part as a result
of the promotion of tourism as a development strategy, particularly
in the developing world, where poverty forces people into sex work.
Resource-scarce regions, including many Latin American countries,
where tourism has experienced considerable support from the government,
have proven to be fertile areas for the growth of sex tourism. Until
the tragic events of September 11, tourism had been increasing steadily
worldwide, with Latin American countries among those enjoying rising
figures. The
World Tourism Organization (WTO) reports that the total number
of visitors to Latin America and the Caribbean
grew by 6.1 percent last year to 57.6 million. Research indicates
that as countries such as Guatemala, El Salvador, Costa Rica, and
Nicaragua have increased efforts to promote tourism on a wide scale,
sex tourism has risen proportionately.
Today,
sex tourism is a multibillion dollar industry that supports an international
workforce estimated to number in the millions. Because prostitution
is illegal in most countries, exact statistics about sex workers,
their international clients, and the money generated within the
industry itself are unavailable. Employees benefiting from the sex
tourism industry include female and male sex workers as well as
— directly or indirectly — members of the entire travel
and tourism sectors, from taxi drivers to airline, hotel, and restaurant
employees. Sex tourism most commonly involves female prostitution,
but, most disturbingly, increasingly involves the sexual exploitation
of children, which is outlawed universally. Whether sex tourism
among consenting adults is a “victimless crime” remains
a point of contention. Excluding some “escorts” working
for elite agencies and high wages, sex workers almost always suffer
from poverty, marginalization, violence, disease, and sexual and
substance abuse.
Sex
tourism is increasing worldwide, but particularly in Latin American,
especially in Central America. In part, the shift in destinations
can be attributed to the crackdown in Asia by organizations
such as the WTO,
End
Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of
Children for Sexual Purposes (ECPAT),
and the United Nations. Sex tourism—especially that involving
exploitation of children—sought areas
where laws are less restrictive and government surveillance
less diligent. |
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Brazil
has long been thought of as the region’s leader in sex tourism,
but recent evidence highlights emerging business in Costa Rica,
Guatemala, and Honduras. Julia O’Connell Davidson, one of
the most knowledgeable experts on the subject of sex tourism, cites
a 1994 study estimating that more than 30,000 Americans and several
thousand more Canadians had retired to Costa Rica. Many of the single
men among them were described as “sex-pats,” expatriates
who retired there not just for the climate, tax breaks, and other
advantages but also for the “easy and cheap sexual access
to their preferred sexual objects.” “What we are seeing
is the dark side of tourism,” said Heimo Laakkonen, head of
UNICEF in Costa
Rica, where tourism is the most profitable industry in the country.
While
views of sex-for-sale between consenting adults vary considerably,
the arena of child sex tourism is disturbing to all. ECPAT
estimates that more than one million children worldwide enter the
sex trade annually, many of them from Latin American countries.
The organization estimated, for example, that in 1994, 500,000 children
in Brazil were involved in the sex industry, and more recently,
the Colombian Ministry of Justice reported at least 25,000 child
prostitutes in that country. The UN Human Rights Committee recently
expressed concern over the “high incidence of commercial sexual
exploitation of children in Costa Rica related to tourism".
Casa Alianza, a non-profit advocacy group for street children in
Mexico and Central America, estimates that some 5,000 street children
in Honduras are involved in sex tourism. Similar problems exist
in Paraguay, the Dominican
Republic, and Venezuela.
The
reasons for the growth in the child sex tourism trade in Latin America
and elsewhere are numerous and often mirror those in the adult sex
tourism industry. According to the Preda Foundation, prostitution
among the estimated 40 million street children in Latin America
has long been a consequence of the region’s poverty. A recent
study of 300 street children by Nicaragua’s Family Ministry
revealed that more than 80 percent of them had started working as
prostitutes that year to support themselves and to buy drugs. Typically,
many thousands of these children have fled abusive homes.
The
increase in the child sex trade is also commonly attributed to the
mistaken impression that younger sex workers are less likely to
be infected with sexually transmitted diseases such as HIV or AIDS,
although figures often dispute this belief.
Another possible reason for the rise in child sex tourism is that
clients often feel less inhibited outside the constraints of their
home countries and may be attracted by what they feel to be less
restrictive social taboos in other countries. Like their adult counterparts,
child sex workers are also frequently lured into the trade by advertisements
for lucrative jobs, travel, and an exciting lifestyle.
One of the greatest boosts to sex tourism overall has been the availability
of information on the Internet related to the sex industry. Some
Web sites are accessible to the general public, while others, such
as the World Sex Archives Web page, require membership and dues
to access their database of photos and bulletin boards of messages
from other sex tourists. Child pornography and prostitution of any
kind are illegal on the Internet, and international efforts to shut
down related Web sites have been reasonably successful. However,lawmakers
have been unable to agree on whether and how to prohibit the advertisement
of adult sex tours, especially since prostitution is legal in many
countries, such as Costa Rica.
Since
the 1990s, ECPAT
and other members of the nongovernmental, governmental, and private
sectors worldwide have been collaborating to raise awareness about
sex tourism and to take steps toward eradicating child sex tourism.
These groups have initiated campaigns that include the use of luggage
tags, ticket pouches, and educational brochures, along with the
development of courses in tourism training schools and in-flight
videos. In 1997, Brazil launched a "No Child Sex Tourism"
campaign, since adopted by the WTO,
to curtail sex tourism and enforce laws imposing jail sentences
on foreigners caught purchasing sex from children. In January 2000,
Mexico enacted an amendment of the federal penal code and code procedures
that declared sex tourism to be a punishable crime.
Latin
American countries share with others in the international community
the enormous and complex challenges posed by the growing sex tourism
industry. Even if they are united in their determination to eliminate
all forms of exploitation of children, countries nevertheless need
to agree on more effective and expedient means of regulating the
entire sex tourism industry. Sex tourism among adults remains a
complex topic involving issues of privacy, consent, religious and
ethical beliefs, and human rights. Only through international cooperation
can the sex tourism industry be regulated successfully and millions
of children be protected against exploitation.
Ann
Barger Hannum, project manager and consultant, has been affiliated
with Harvard for the past ten years, most recently at the Harvard
AIDS Institute. The author thanks Julia M. Green, project associate
for the Community Research Initiative of New England, for her collaboration
with this article.
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