We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Dealing in Human Flesh
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
-
08 December 2026

In the wake of World War I, the League of Nations and numerous investigative journalists went undercover to infiltrate sex-trafficking rings, conduct clandestine interviews with men and women participating in the vice trade, and identify the weak links in their operations in order to destroy this "global menace." These covert researchers discovered that the sex-trafficking industry was dominated not by vast underworld syndicates but by petty hustlers operating tiny fly-by-night operations. In Dealing in Human Flesh, Jeffrey S. Adler uses these unpublished field reports to map how small-time criminals conducted their sex-trafficking ventures. Adler shows that, despite policymakers' (and filmmakers') obsessions with the cartels and international crime rings of myth, it was in fact the business model of sex traffickers that narcotics and arms smugglers borrowed from to forge the surprisingly un-organized structure of early twenty-first-century human, cocaine, and weapons trafficking.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. "The Purer and Whiter the Girl, the Greater Is His Energy to Enchain Her": White Slavers
2. "Withdraw the Veil": Investigators
3. Traffickers in Human Flesh: Souteneurs
4. "All the Leaders of Pimpdom May Be Found Here": Souteneur Subculture
5. "Graft, Graft, Graft! That’s All They Have Down Here": Middlemen
6. "When the Devil Is Hungry, He Eats Flies": Sex Workers
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index