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portada Sex Trafficking and Modern Slavery: The Absence of Evidence (Sex Trafficking: International Context and Response, 2)
Type
Physical Book
Publisher
Language
English
Pages
228
Format
Hardcover
ISBN13
9781138686762
Edition No.
2

Sex Trafficking and Modern Slavery: The Absence of Evidence (Sex Trafficking: International Context and Response, 2)

Marie Segrave (Author) · Routledge · Hardcover

Sex Trafficking and Modern Slavery: The Absence of Evidence (Sex Trafficking: International Context and Response, 2) - Marie Segrave

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Synopsis "Sex Trafficking and Modern Slavery: The Absence of Evidence (Sex Trafficking: International Context and Response, 2)"

The second volume of Sex Trafficking: International context and response Human trafficking and modern slavery have captured the imagination and attention of the international community. This book builds on the authors' first volume, Sex Trafficking: International context and response. Much has changed since the first volume was published, not least the shift away from sex trafficking to modern slavery as the dominant focus in policy and advocacy. Yet, as the authors argue, little has changed with regards to how nations respond. This volume re-examines the international counter-trafficking scholarship and policy response, to offer an analysis based on original and new data. This book lays the ground for specific forms of research and inquiry that are necessary to better understand and respond to the range of exploitative practices and conditions that give rise to human trafficking. This book offers a detailed analysis of the dominant response to human trafficking, which is framed by the criminal justice process. Examining the identification of victims, the investigation of cases, victim support, prosecutorial decisions and repatriation practices, the authors draw upon original research from Australia, Serbia and Thailand: three diverse nations that, like nations across the globe, have invested heavily in criminalisation as the dominant response to counter trafficking. They argue that exploitation sits at the nexus of global migration patterns and emphasise the importance of speaking to those directly affected by counter-trafficking policies and those directly involved in their implementation in order to produce empirical data to inform how we make sense of the numbers that are produced, the outcome of the policies and how we ought to determine success in this context. An empirical, criminologically informed opportunity to reconsider the dominant ways of understanding and strategies of responding to human trafficking, this multi-disciplinary book will be of interest to those engaged in criminology, sociology, law, political science, public policy and gender studies.

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