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E-raamat: Global Human Trafficking: Critical Issues and Contexts [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

Edited by (Queensland University of Technology, Australia.)
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Human trafficking has moved from relative obscurity to a major area of research, policy and teaching over the past ten years. Research has sprung from criminology, public policy, women’s and gender studies, sociology, anthropology, and law, but has been somewhat hindered by the failure of scholars to engage beyond their own disciplines and favoured methodologies. Recent research has begun to improve efforts to understand the causes of the problem, the experiences of victims, policy efforts, and their consequences in specific cultural and historical contexts.Global Human Trafficking: Critical issues and contexts foregrounds recent empirical work on human trafficking from an interdisciplinary, critical perspective. The collection includes classroom-friendly features, such as introductory chapters that provide essential background for understanding the trafficking literature, textboxes explaining key concepts, discussion questions for each chapter, and lists of additional resources, including films, websites, and additional readings for each chapter.The authors include both eminent and emerging scholars from around the world, drawn from law, anthropology, criminology, sociology, cultural studies, and political science and the book will be useful for undergraduate and graduate courses in these areas, as well as for scholars interested in trafficking.
List of contributors
ix
Acknowledgments xii
1 Introduction
1(4)
Molly dragiewicz
SECTION I Critical contexts for thinking about trafficking
5(34)
2 The trafficking policy debates
7(16)
Joyce Outshoorn
3 Data matters: Issues and challenges for research on trafficking
23(16)
Elzbieta m. Gozdziak
SECTION II Key issues in trafficking research
39(82)
4 Sex, violence, and the border: Trafficking for sex work from Mexico to the U.S.
43(14)
Anna Maternick
Melissa Hope Ditmore
5 At sea: The trafficking of seafarers and fishers from Ukraine
57(19)
Rebecca Surtees
6 Human trafficking in "fresh" organs for illicit transplants: A protected crime
76(15)
Nancy Scheper-Hughes
7 (Not!) child trafficking in Benin
91(14)
Neil Howard
Simona Morganti
8 Bride traffic: Trafficking for marriage to Australia
105(16)
Kelly Richards
Samantha Lyneham
SECTION III Trafficking policy: Intent and outcomes
121(46)
9 Clinton, Bush, and Obama: Changing policy and rhetoric in the United States Annual Trafficking in Persons Report
123(15)
Erin O'Brien
Michael Wilson
10 Service providers and their perceptions of the service needs of sex trafficking victims in the United States
138(15)
Claire M. Renzetti
11 On broken chains and missing links: Tackling the "demand side of trafficking"?
153(14)
Julia O'Connell Davidson
SECTION IV Moving forward
167(32)
12 "We have the right not to be 'rescued'. . .": When anti-trafficking programs undermine the health and well-being of sex workers
169(12)
Aziza Ahmed
Meena Seshu
13 Nothing like chocolate: Sex trafficking and child labor trafficking
181(14)
Kum-Kum Bhavnani
Emily Schneider
14 Conclusion: The future of human trafficking research
195(4)
Molly Dragiewicz
Index 199
Molly Dragiewicz is Associate Professor in the School of Justice, Faculty of Law at Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane, Australia. Dr. Dragiewicz is author of Equality with a vengeance: Mens rights groups, battered women, and antifeminist backlash. She received the Critical Criminologist of the Year Award from the American Society of Criminology Division on Critical Criminology in 2012 and the New Scholar Award from the American Society of Criminology Division on Women and Crime in 2009.