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Revisiting the Trafficking–Sex Tourism Nexus: Reflections on the Approach of Treaty Bodies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 August 2025

Jason HAYNES*
Affiliation:
Birmingham Law School, University of Birmingham, England, UK
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Abstract

This note critically examines the tendency of some international human rights treaty bodies to uncritically conflate sex tourism with human trafficking. Through analysis of concluding observations from the Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC), the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), and the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR), the note reveals a troubling pattern of equating these phenomena without adequate conceptual differentiation. While acknowledging that sex tourism can involve trafficking when the constitutive elements of the Palermo Protocol’s definition are satisfied – namely the act, means, and purpose requirements – this note argues that the wholesale characterization of sex tourism as trafficking is both conceptually inaccurate and potentially harmful. This conflation risks eliding the agency of individuals who make difficult but deliberate choices to participate in sex tourism, particularly women from the Global South.

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In recent decades, international human rights law has increasingly focused on combating human trafficking,Footnote 1 with particular attention to sexual exploitation. While this increased attention to trafficking is laudable, it has also given rise to conceptual ambiguities and problematic conflations that warrant critical scrutiny.Footnote 2 This note examines one such conflation: the tendency of international human rights treaty bodies to uncritically equate sex tourism with human trafficking.

The Palermo Protocol defines trafficking in persons in the following manner:

“Trafficking in persons” shall mean the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of deception, of the abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability or of the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control over another person, for the purpose of exploitation. Exploitation shall include, at a minimum, the exploitation of the prostitution of others or other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labour or services, slavery or practices similar to slavery, servitude or the removal of organs.Footnote 3

There are several important features of this definition. First, it treats the trafficking (of adults) as a tripartite phenomenon, divided into “acts”, “means”, and “purpose” elements. In respect of children, however, only the “acts” and “purpose” elements are necessary to establish the offence.Footnote 4 Second, a victim cannot consent to their exploitation where any of the “means” are present.Footnote 5 Third, the definition of “exploitation” is non-exhaustive; servitude, slavery, and the removal of organs are only illustrative.Footnote 6 Importantly also, the definition does not prohibit prostitution as such, but rather the exploitation of prostitution.Footnote 7 Yet, as this note demonstrates, treaty bodies on occasion characterize sex tourism as trafficking without adequate engagement with this definitional framework.

This conflation is not merely a matter of semantic imprecision. Rather, it raises profound questions about agency, autonomy, and the complex realities of individuals navigating difficult structural constraints in the global political economy. By uncritically treating sex tourism as trafficking, treaty bodies risk reinforcing paternalistic and neo-colonial attitudes that deny the decision-making capacity of subaltern individuals, particularly women from the Global South. This approach may inadvertently perpetuate harmful stereotypes and impede the development of nuanced policy responses that address exploitation while respecting individual autonomy.

I. Context and significance

The conflation of sex tourism with trafficking occurs against a backdrop of increasing global attention to both phenomena. Sex tourism – the practice of travelling to engage in sexual activities, often with individuals in economically disadvantaged positions – has become a significant component of the tourism industry in many countries of the Global South.Footnote 8 Meanwhile, human trafficking has emerged as a priority issue in international human rights law, with states increasingly pressured to adopt legislative and policy measures to combat it.Footnote 9

The relationship between these phenomena is complex. While trafficking can certainly occur within the context of sex tourism, not all instances of sex tourism involve trafficking as defined by the Palermo Protocol. This distinction is crucial, as it affects not only conceptual clarity but also the development of appropriate legal and policy responses. When treaty bodies uncritically conflate these phenomena, they risk promoting overly broad approaches that may not effectively address the specific harms associated with either practice.

Moreover, this conflation raises important questions about how we understand exploitation, vulnerability, and agency in postcolonial contexts. The Global North’s historical tendency to portray individuals from the Global South, particularly women, as lacking agency has long been critiqued by postcolonial and feminist scholars.Footnote 10 When treaty bodies characterize all sex tourism as trafficking, they risk reinforcing these problematic narratives, potentially undermining the very rights and dignity they seek to protect.Footnote 11

II. Methodology and structure

This note conducts a textual analysis, as noted in Table 1 below, of concluding observations issued by key treaty bodies,Footnote 12 specifically the Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC),Footnote 13 the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW),Footnote 14 and the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR),Footnote 15 to identify patterns in how these bodies characterize the relationship between trafficking and sex tourism. This analysis reveals a tendency to treat sex tourism as inherently a form of trafficking, often without qualification or nuance. Second, the note examines the definitional frameworks of trafficking and sex tourism, highlighting the distinctions between these phenomena while acknowledging their potential interconnections. This analysis draws on the Palermo Protocol’s definition of trafficking and engages with scholarly critiques of this definition’s limitations in capturing the full spectrum of exploitation. Third, the note incorporates insights from postcolonial feminist theory to interrogate the implications of conflating trafficking and sex tourism on the agency and autonomy of subaltern individuals. This theoretical framework helps illuminate how seemingly protective interventions can perpetuate harmful stereotypes and power dynamics. Finally, the note engages with empirical studies that document the complex realities of individuals involved in sex tourism, highlighting the diverse motivations, experiences, and choices that characterize this phenomenon. These empirical insights provide a necessary counterbalance to overly simplistic characterizations of sex tourism as inherently exploitative.

Table 1. Lists the concluding observations in which treaty bodies address sex tourism in the context of human trafficking.

III. The trafficking–sex tourism nexus

Although some treaty bodies have rightly recognized that, given the non-exhaustive definition of “exploitation” contained in Article 3 of the Palermo Protocol, a person may in some circumstances be trafficked for the purposes of sex tourism,Footnote 16 in far too many cases treaty bodies have uncritically, and, indeed, in an unqualified fashion, treated sex tourism per se as a form of trafficking. By way of example, the CRC, in its report on Argentina, asserted:

The Committee recommends that the State party continue its effort to harmonize its legislation with the Optional Protocol and that it amend Act. No. 26364 on the Prevention and Punishment of Trafficking in Persons and Assistance to Victims to include common forms of human trafficking, such as sex tourism and forced marriage.Footnote 17

Meanwhile, CESCR, in respect of Madagascar, expressed the following:

The Committee is concerned about the persistence of trafficking in women and children, including sex tourism, in the country, in particular for girls living in poverty in rural and remote areas, despite the adoption of Act. No. 2007-038 of 14 January 2008 amending and supplementing certain provisions of the Criminal Code concerning measures to prevent trafficking in persons and sex tourism, and the Act ratifying the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons Especially Women and Children, supplementing the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (Palermo Protocol), as well as awareness-raising campaigns on sex tourism.Footnote 18

Separately, the CEDAW has adopted a zero-tolerance approach to sex tourism, calling on ColombiaFootnote 19 and Kenya,Footnote 20 respectively, to “implement measures aimed at combating sex tourism, including in cooperation with tourists’ countries of origin”.Footnote 21

Treaty bodies are not alone in their unequivocal characterization of sex tourism as a form of human trafficking, largely on account of the asymmetrical power dynamics that characterize the typical sex tourism scenario and the “othering” that arises in this context. Legal scholars, such as Jonathan Todres, for example, are especially critical of sex tourism, which he argues “draws from the pool of trafficked victims”.Footnote 22 He contends that sex tourism is problematic because it enables men from the Global North to exhibit towards women in the Global South sexual behaviour which they would dare not engage in in their home countries.Footnote 23 These men often justify their behaviour by drawing on crude stereotypes of subaltern women as being subservient and exotic.Footnote 24 This “racialized, spatial, gendered, and class-based othering”Footnote 25 rationalizes abuse as part of the “other’s” culture, such that the “self is seen as altruistic, helping these young girls whose culture imposes their difficult circumstances”.Footnote 26 Richards and Reid are similarly critical of the fact that the sex tourism industry allows for local men in the Global South to be constructed as hypersexualised “black male studs”,Footnote 27 while local women are constructed as “hot brown or black women whose main role is to serve the visitor”.Footnote 28

From a postcolonial feminist perspective, the argument that sex tourism may contribute to the othering and exploitation of subaltern women in particular is understandable. So too is the argument that in many sex tourism cases the individual’s personal, situational, or circumstantial vulnerability is intentionally used or otherwise taken advantage of, to recruit, transport, transfer, harbour, or receive that person for the purpose of exploiting him or her, such that the person believes that submitting to the will of the abuser is the only real or acceptable option available to him or her, and that belief is reasonable in light of the victim’s situation, which is inconsistent with Article 3 of the Palermo Protocol.Footnote 29 However, I take issue with the uncritical and unequivocal characterization of all cases of sex tourism as human trafficking. From a purely conceptual perspective, while a person may, for example, be harboured by means of force, threat, or coercion and thereby exploited for sex by a visitor, this does not represent every case of human trafficking. In many cases of sex tourism, the “acts” of, inter alia, recruitment, transportation, and harbouring as well as the “means” of threat, force, or coercion are not present, thereby negating a finding of human trafficking. In this context, it is unsurprising that the International Organization for Migration has noted that “in no way is every case of sex tourism associated with human trafficking, but it is known that human trafficking exists within this industry”.Footnote 30

That said, it is worth acknowledging that the interpretive uncertainty occasioned by the conflation between trafficking and sex tourism reflects a deeper limitation of the Palermo Protocol’s definition of trafficking itself. The Protocol’s tripartite framework of acts, means, and purpose, while representing near-global consensus (evidenced by the high number of state ratifications), struggles to fully capture the complex spectrum of exploitation that exists in the sex tourism industry. The definition’s focus on discrete acts rather than structural conditions of exploitation arguably creates artificial distinctions that may not reflect the wide array of lived experiences. For instance, while the Palermo Protocol requires specific “acts” like recruitment or harbouring, and coercive “means”, the reality of sex tourism often involves more fluid scenarios where exploitation occurs through subtle economic and social pressures rather than overt force or clearly identifiable criminal acts, though it is arguable that this might be captured by the amorphous phrase “abuse of a position of vulnerability”. This definitional rigidity might help explain why treaty bodies and other institutions sometimes default to overly broad interpretations that characterize all sex tourism as trafficking – it is an attempt to address forms of exploitation that do not fit neatly within the Protocol’s narrow framework. However, such expansive interpretations risk undermining both conceptual clarity and the Protocol’s utility as a targeted instrument against specific forms of exploitation. This underscores the need for more nuanced approaches that address exploitation in the sex tourism industry without either ignoring genuine situations of trafficking or unduly restraining the agency of subaltern women who benefit from sex tourism.

On the latter point, there are real dangers of unequivocally characterizing sex tourism as human trafficking. First, such an approach turns a blind eye to the fact that many subaltern women make the difficult, but considered, choice to work in the sex tourism industry. Ward-PelarFootnote 31 and Piscitelli’sFootnote 32 empirical work, for example, found that, in the Brazilian context, many women use the sex tourism industry as an opportunity to make decent money, and thereby improve their socioeconomic circumstances.

Relatedly, unequivocally characterizing sex tourism as human trafficking ignores the complexity of human sexuality and diminishes the sexual autonomy of subaltern people. In this regard, Sanchez Taylor has argued that subaltern women may act as girlfriends to foreign male tourists, not asking for payment for sexual services, and instead accepting gifts, in the hope that someday a marriage may ensue and with it, an exit visa.Footnote 33 JeffreysFootnote 34 and PhillipsFootnote 35 also respectively argue that sex tourism may in some cases provide an avenue for subaltern men to demonstrate their manhood and in this context feel liberated from the pressure to maintain steady and traditional relationships and, indeed, employment.

In short, then, while there may be (and, indeed, often are) links between human trafficking and the sex tourism industry, particularly when vulnerability is abused, the unequivocal treatment of sex tourism as a form of human trafficking by treaty bodies is conceptually improper, robs many subaltern women of their autonomy, and risks eliding the complex choices that these women often make to ensure their economic independence. Meyers describes these complex choices that women in particular make as operating within the framework of “burdened agency”.Footnote 36

Treaty bodies must subscribe to a new vision of the trafficking–sex tourism nexus that is grounded in the idea of burdened agency. “Burdened agency”, argues Meyer, is an explicit recognition that when faced with appalling circumstances, subaltern women often make complex decisions that reaffirm their agency, and which are supportive of their quest for a better life.Footnote 37 This may mean that subaltern women, in the face of patriarchy, misogyny, and limited opportunities, may demonstrate resilience and resistance by selling their sexual services.Footnote 38 This does not imply that they always have full agency in these circumstances, but rather, that their agency is “burdened”.

IV. Conclusion

This note has demonstrated how international human rights treaty bodies consistently conflate sex tourism with human trafficking despite the conceptual distinctions between these phenomena. While the Palermo Protocol establishes a clear tripartite definition requiring specific acts, means, and purpose to constitute trafficking, treaty bodies frequently characterize sex tourism as inherently trafficking without qualifying this assertion or engaging with definitional nuances. This conflation is not merely semantic but carries profound implications. Most significantly, it erases the agency of individuals, particularly women from the Global South, who make difficult but deliberate choices to participate in sex tourism economies. By treating all such participation as trafficking, treaty bodies risk perpetuating paternalistic narratives that deny the “burdened agency” exercised by subaltern individuals navigating structural constraints in the global political economy. Moreover, this conceptual imprecision reveals deeper limitations in how international law conceptualizes exploitation and vulnerability. The Palermo Protocol’s focus on discrete criminal acts rather than structural conditions creates artificial distinctions that inadequately capture the complex spectrum of lived experiences within sex tourism contexts. While exploitation certainly occurs within sex tourism, treating it as categorically equivalent to trafficking undermines both conceptual clarity and effective policy responses. Treaty bodies should adopt more nuanced approaches that recognize potential exploitation while respecting individual autonomy. This requires acknowledging that while trafficking can occur within sex tourism contexts, not all instances of sex tourism constitute trafficking. By developing frameworks that address harmful conditions without denying agency, treaty bodies can contribute to more effective and ethically sound responses to both trafficking and problematic forms of sex tourism. This nuanced approach would better serve the interests of those they aim to protect while advancing the conceptual precision necessary for meaningful human rights advocacy.

Acknowledgements

The author would like to thank the reviewers for their comments.

Funding statement

None.

Competing interests

The author declares none.

References

1 Tom OBOKATA, “A Human Rights Framework to Address Trafficking of Human Beings” (2006) 24(3) Netherlands Quarterly of Human Rights 379; Tom OBOKATA, Trafficking of Human Beings from A Human Rights Perspective: Towards a More Holistic Approach, Vol. 89 (Leiden: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2006) at Chapter 4; Ryszard PIOTROWICZ, “States’ Obligations under Human Rights Law Towards Victims of Trafficking in Human Beings: Positive Developments in Positive Obligations” (2012) 24(2) International Journal of Refugee Law 181; Vladislava STOYANOVA, Human Trafficking and Slavery Reconsidered: Conceptual Limits and States’ Positive Obligations in European Law (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017).

2 Jason HAYNES, “International Human Rights Law’s Complicity in Status Subordination: A Postcolonial Critique of Treaty Bodies’ Engagement with Human Trafficking” (2025) Leiden Journal of International Law 1–33. doi:10.1017/S0922156525100332.

3 A Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children, supplementing the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, 15 November 2000, 2237 U.N.T.S. 319 (entered into force 25 December 2003) [The Palermo Protocol], Art. 3(a).

4 Ibid., Art. 3(c).

5 Ibid., Art. 3(b).

6 Jean ALLAIN, Slavery in International Law: Of Human Exploitation and Trafficking (Leiden: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2012) at 2.

7 Monique TREPANIER, “Trafficking in Women for Purposes of Sexual Exploitation: A Matter of Consent?” (2003) 22(3) Canadian Woman Studies 48 at 51.

8 Sitinga KACHIPANDE, “Sun, Sand, Sex, and Safari: The Interplay of Sex Tourism and Global Inequalities in Africa’s Tourism Industry” (2023) 40(1) Journal of Global South Studies at 1–37; Frances BROWN and Derek HALL, “Tourism and Development in the Global South: The Issues” (2008) 29(5) Third World Quarterly 839.

9 Jason HAYNES, “Paradoxes and Anomalies in Caribbean Anti-trafficking Law and Practice” (2023) 40(1) Journal of Global South Studies 145; Jason HAYNES, “The Troubling Influence and Impact of the UK’s Modern Slavery Agenda on Caribbean Anti-trafficking Law and Practice” (2024) 4 International Criminology 323.

10 Kamala KEMPADOO and Elena SHIH, “Introduction: Rethinking the Field from Anti-Racist and Decolonial Perspectives” in Kamala KEMPADOO and Elena SHIH, eds., White Supremacy, Racism and the Coloniality of Anti-Trafficking (London: Taylor & Francis, 2022); Ratna KAPUR, “Human Rights in the 21st Century: Take a Walk on The Dark Side” (2006) 28(4) Sydney Law Review 665.

11 Jason HAYNES, “The Functions of the Principle of Dignity in Anti-Trafficking Adjudication” (2023) 190 Law & Justice: The Christian Law Review 62.

12 Most treaty bodies do not appear to have addressed sex tourism in the context of human trafficking in their concluding observations.

13 Convention on the Rights of the Child, 20 November 1989, 1577 U.N.T.S. 3 (entered into force 2 September 1990) [CRC].

14 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, 18 December 1979, 1249 U.N.T.S. 13 (entered into force 3 September 1981) [CEDAW].

15 International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, 16 December 1966, 993 U.N.T.S. 3 (entered into force 3 January 1976) [ICESCR].

16 UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, Concluding Observations: Sao Tome and Principe, 31 May 2023, CEDAW/C/STP/CO/1–5 at [30]; UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, Concluding Observations: The Gambia, 1 November 2022, CEDAW/C/GMB/CO/6 at [23]; UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, Concluding Observations: Peru, 1 March 2022, CEDAW/C/PER/CO/9 at [27].

17 UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, Concluding Observations: Argentina, 18 June 2010, CRC/C/OPSC/ARG/CO/1 7 at [8].

18 UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Concluding Observations: Madagascar, 16 December 2009, E/C.12/MDG/CO/2 at [24].

19 UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women, Concluding Comments: Colombia, 2 February 2007, CEDAW/C/COL/CO/6 at [20].

20 UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women, Concluding Comments: Kenya, 10 August 2007, CEDAW/C/KEN/CO/6 at [30].

21 See also: UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women, Concluding Observations: Madagascar, 7 November 2008, CEDAW/C/MDG/CO/5 at [21].

22 Jonathan TODRES, “Law, Otherness, and Human Trafficking” (2009) 49 Santa Clara Law Review 605 at 624.

23 Ibid., at 625.

24 Ibid., at 626.

25 Ibid.

26 Ibid., at 627.

27 Tara RICHARDS and Joan REID, “Gender Stereotyping and Sex Trafficking: Comparative Review of Research on Male and Female Sex Tourism” (2017) 38(3) Journal of Crime and Justice 414 at 419.

28 Ibid.

29 “Abuse of a position of vulnerability” is listed as one of the “means” in the definition of trafficking under Article 3 of the Palermo Protocol. See: United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, “Issue Paper on Abuse of a Position of Vulnerability and Other Means within the Definition of Trafficking in Persons” (October 2012), online: UNODC www.unodc.org/unodc/en/humantrafficking/publications.html?ref=menuside.

30 Ashley GARRETT and Amy MAHONEY, “Intra-Caribbean Migration and the Conflict Nexus” (Human Rights Internet, International Organization for Migration, the Association of Caribbean States, and The University of the West Indies, 2006) at 158.

31 Jennifer WARD-PELAR, “Rationalizing Sexual Tourism: How Some Countries Benefit from Selling Sex” (2010) 2(4) Inquiries Journal 3.

32 Ibid., at 8.

33 Jacqueline SANCHEZ TAYLOR, “Dollars Are a Girl’s Best Friend? Female Tourists’ Sexual Behaviour in the Caribbean” (2001) 35(3) Sociology 749.

34 Sheila JEFFREYS, “Sex Tourism: Do Women Do It Too?” (2003) 22(3) Leisure Studies 223.

35 Joan PHILLIPS, “Female Sex Tourism in Barbados: A Postcolonial Perspective” (2008) 14(2) Brown Journal of World Affairs 201.

36 Diana Tietjens MEYERS, “Two Victim Paradigms and the Problem of ‘Impure’ Victims” (2011) 2(2) Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development 255.

37 Ibid., at 268–9.

38 Diana Tietjens MEYERS, “Feminism and Sex Trafficking: Rethinking some Aspects of Autonomy and Paternalism” (2014) 17 Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 427 at 436.

Figure 0

Table 1. Lists the concluding observations in which treaty bodies address sex tourism in the context of human trafficking.