Category: Sex Trafficking Myths

  • The "White Slavery" Panic

    This theory held that vast criminal networks were abducting young women in ordinary public settings—sometimes by means of drugged drinks, sometimes with hidden needles or chemical pricks—and shipping them into prostitution circuits in foreign ports, including South America. In its strongest form, the panic imagined urban streets, theatres, stations, and department stores as hunting grounds for organized traffickers operating almost in plain sight. The documented record clearly shows that the white-slavery panic became a major transatlantic moral crisis in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and that kidnapping-through-drug or hypodermic-needle stories were part of its legend structure. What remains much less secure is the claim that thousands of women were actually being seized in daylight and exported in the numbers claimed by the panic. The myth far exceeded the documented pattern.