Human trafficking in France in the 19th century: sexual slavery is human trafficking. "Trafficking refers to recruitment, transportation, enslavement or welcome to recruit people (Pubantz, Jerry, Allphin Moore Jr.)" In France in the 19th century, prostitution is a common form of trafficking was. Trafficking is often mistaken for another prostitution term. Misunderstandings occur frequently, but prostitution is a key to the French Revolution.
At the beginning of the 19th century, France of Napoleon rose and fell down. For the century the United States became a global force and the British Empire has gained worldwide control. In the 19th century, rapid industrialization and globalization were born and living standards continued to improve, but people's understanding about economic and social division of labor also improved. In the latter half of the 19th century, new political ideologies emerged, especially in Europe, such as the growing importance of Marxism and the identity of citizens.
From the beginning of the 17th century until the 1960s, France possessed colonial wealth in various forms. In the 19th and 20th century, its world colonial empire was the second largest empire after the Taishi Empire. At the peak between 1919 and 1939, the second French colonial empire extended more than 12,347,000 square kilometers (4,767,000 square miles) of land. The total area of French sovereignty including the French metropolis reached 12,898,000 square kilometers (4,980,000 square miles) from the 1920s to the 1930s, accounting for 8.6% of the world's land area.
In the 19th century France experienced many changes that deeply influenced society. Industrialization changed the French economy from major agricultural economies to major industrial economies. Politically, the 1848 revolution permanently abolished the monarchy and replaced it with a new republic. It itself is replaced by a new empire led by the descendants of Napoleon Bonaparte. Culturally, the rise of Louis Napoleon has rebuilt Paris into a completely modern city, and artists draw from experimental themes and formats depicting bourgeoisie and working stages from classical forms and themes It changed to.
France in the late nineteenth century witnessed unprecedented social, economic and technological change. In 1853, Napoleon III appointed Baron Georges Osman as governor, and Paris changed from a medieval city to a modern city. Under the ruthless guidance of Osman, the whole community was destroyed and today wide boulevards, parks, plazas, marinas, and new office buildings and houses were born. At the same time, the French transportation infrastructure has improved drastically, and the number of railroads and roads connecting Paris with remote communities and coastal town has increased. Accessibility to Paris, the main commercial and cultural center of the country, and the emergence of emerging industries in the suburbs, doubled the urban population and resulted in a rapid inflow of rural people . Rural landscapes and cultures have also changed, and industry and tourism have penetrated rural areas.