Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking: The Victim Journey
Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking: The Victim Journey
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Abstract
This volume draws a comprehensive picture of the modern slavery and human trafficking (MSHT) victim/survivor trajectory. The main aim has been to offer a critical, yet ‘down-to-earth’, overview of the victim/survivor journey, intended both in actual and metaphorical terms. To achieve this, we have put together contributors across the chapters from different fields and perspectives, including from academic and non-academic fields (academic who are also-practitioners or academic writing together with practitioners). While some draw from critical theories (in power, race, migration, gender, epistemology), others are descriptive of a specific phenomenon of investigation. The volume is a multifaceted and four-dimensional exploration of the journey of the trafficked person. From recruitment through to representation and (re)integration to an examination of the intersection of MSHT with other discourses, in media, films and services; from the macro perspective of organised crime and large business, to the micro-physics of the processes of self- and sense-making of assisted survivors; from how the demand from the UK impacts the online sexual exploitation of children on the other side of the world, to how legal cases are conducted in the UK, it will enable the reader to ‘connect the dots’ making up this journey. By approaching this complex topic – understood both as an actual phenomenon and as a construct – from different angles, professional roles and positionings, we would like to equip readers to be able to build up their own, better-informed interpretations of ‘the victim’s journey’.
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Front Matter
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Introduction: Victim journeys, survivors’ voice
Runa Lazzarino and others
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Part I Recruiting: business and tools
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1
Criminal pyramid scheme: organised crime recruitment strategies
Sasha Jesperson andRune Henriksen
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2
Organ trafficking: a neglected aspect of modern slavery
Trevor Stammers
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3
Online child sexual exploitation in the Philippines: addressing demand
Imogen Fell andSasha Jesperson
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4
The role of business in the exploitation and rehabilitation of victims of modern slavery
Colleen Theron
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1
Criminal pyramid scheme: organised crime recruitment strategies
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Part II Being a victim: discourses and representations
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5
Trafficking on film: a critical survey
Jon Hackett
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6
Discursive representations of ‘invisible migrants’ in British social media
Thi-Diem-Tu Tran andKaren Sanders
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7 Racialising and criminalising vulnerable migrants: the case of human trafficking and modern slavery
Neena Samota andDebbie Ariyo
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8
Victims perpetrating a crime: a critique of responses to criminal exploitation and modern slavery in the UK
Craig H. Barlow
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5
Trafficking on film: a critical survey
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Part III Caring: practices and resilience
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9
Subject-making in ambiguous systems: trafficking aftercare in the UK and beyond
Runa Lazzarino andAnne-Marie Greenslade
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10
Sexual exploitation: framing women’s needs and experiences
Kathryn Hodges and others
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11
Survivor support: how a values-based service can enhance access to psychological capital
Carole Murphy andKaren Anstiss
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12
Imagining otherwise: art and movement as tools for recovery
Anna Westin
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13
Monitoring and evaluating anti-trafficking measures
Ruth Van Dyke andMike Dottridge
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Conclusion: Interrupting the journey
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9
Subject-making in ambiguous systems: trafficking aftercare in the UK and beyond
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End Matter
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