Do Public Events Affect Sex Trafficking Activity?
Kyle Miller, Emily Kennedy, Artur Dubrawski

TL;DR
This study uses online escort ad volumes as a proxy to analyze the impact of 33 large public events, including the Super Bowl, on sex trafficking activity, challenging common beliefs with data-driven evidence.
Contribution
It introduces a quantitative method to assess the influence of public events on sex trafficking, providing evidence to inform resource allocation and policy decisions.
Findings
Many events show no significant impact on sex-worker advertising.
Some events are correlated with increased ad activity.
The method can identify other influential events beyond initial list.
Abstract
For several years the pervasive belief that the Super Bowl is the single biggest day for human trafficking in the United States each year has been perpetuated in popular press despite a lack of evidentiary support. The practice of relying on hearsay and popular belief for decision-making may result in misappropriation of resources in anti-trafficking efforts. We propose a data-driven approach to analyzing sex trafficking, especially as it is carried on during--and perhaps in response to--large public events such as the Super Bowl. We examine 33 public events, chosen for attendance numbers comparable to the Super Bowl from a diversity of types, and use the volume of escort advertisements posted online as an accessible and reasonable proxy measure for the actual levels of activity of sex-workers as well as trafficking victims. Our analysis puts the impact of local public events on sex…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSex work and related issues · Consumer Market Behavior and Pricing
