Protecting Protection Programmes or Engaging with People? Conditional Inclusion and Evolving Relational Dynamics in Anti-Trafficking Programmes
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Anti-Trafficking Programmes, Structural Violence, and Conditional Inclusion
3. Research Design and Methods
4. Background of the Research
4.1. The Evolution of Anti-Trafficking Programmes in Italy
4.2. The Evolution of Anti-Trafficking Programmes in the Veneto Region
5. Empirical Findings
5.1. Case Managers’ “Stratified Layers of Knowledge” and the Violent Imposition of an Ethnocentric Social Inclusion Approach
The N.A.Ve programme gives many good resources [compared to asylum seeker reception projects] that makes you think you have everything you can achieve a lot of goals with people. Usually, when you work with local authorities, you have zero resources, you have no internships for example, therefore you must be hyper-creative with possible solutions. In the N.A.Ve programme, you have (…) a really rich and professional package of resources, but sometimes not even this is enough and then you ask yourself: “Is it me who is doing something wrong or do we have to re-calibrate our goals?”[my translation from Italian] (interview, Case Manager, female, 19 May 2020) (Semprebon 2023, p. 134)
This is the new challenge: how to offer a dignified life and a form of integration that makes sense (…) We need to understand the needs expressed by people. We need to understand where they want to start from, we can’t impose ourselves with our views, we need to consider their migratory project.[my translation from Italian] (interview, Crisis and Evaluation Unit Coordinator, female, 28 May 2020) (Semprebon 2023, p. 123)
5.2. Conditional Inclusion and the Experience of Nigerian Women in the N.A.Ve Social Protection Programme
5.3. Entering the Programme
Before you start the project there is a “hot seat”. This is the big question. They want you to say your story but not everybody wants to say it. (…) Some fear they may be arrested, they are really scared, not ashamed, no, they are more scared. Some of them think the operatori [Crisis and Evaluation Practictioners] are [colleagues of] the police and will ask for information [on exploiters]. They confuse them because for them it is all government staff. (…) Some people do not want to report [to the police]. I did not want to report as I had already paid [my debt] and I wanted to start a new life and forget about it.(interview, Osasenaga, 16 October 2020, entrance in 2019, +20)
There are feelings that people are afraid of sharing, you know. You may have those feelings deep down in you. Maybe you feel pain and you don’t want to say it to people, those feelings can hurt. (…) So it is hard to tell your story. It is hard to trust people you do not know. (…) Yes, it was a little hard [for me too to trust the practitioners]. You have to see, trust and believe. You need to see first, because someone entering the program, you know, if you don’t know what is inside that programme, you do not know what to do, it takes time to decide.(interview, Omosigho, 19 October 2020, entrance in 2020, 17 years)
Yes, yes, I call her [the Case Manager] whenever I need something. I always call her. She has done many things for me. She helped me understand, she gave me the chance to explain myself and ask questions on what I did not understand. I have known her for a long time now, I know her better than other people in the programme. If I need help I know I can call her any time and she will answer the phone.(interview, Efe, 6 October 2020, entrance in 2018, +20 years)
They are very very hard. When your time is finished they say you have to leave. If your time is up, you have to leave. But when you arrive to the programme you want to change your life. If you complete the programme and do not have a job immediately, what can you do? I know of people that went back to the street to do prostitution. How can you survive? I think that the programme should first make sure that all people in the programme are settled and then start taking other women in. people join the programme to change their life. If the programme does not change their life, what is it for?(interview, Osasenaga, 16 October 2020, entrance in 2019, +20 years)
5.4. Exiting the Programme
5.5. Dealing with Rules and Roles of the Programme
I do not like it when I ask for something and the [Reception] practitioners forget or take endless time to reply to you. When I asked for the mobile phone for example, they never talked about it again. They always say: ok, let’s see, we will talk with the Case Manager and then the Legal Guardian and this and that and you never get to the end of that request. It takes forever.(interview, Esewi, 28 October 2020, entrance in 2019, 16 years)
When I first arrived in the programme, I meet a Mediator. I was having trouble with the police then. When the police found me in a flat that I was sharing with other Nigerian people she also arrived and she came with me to the Questura. I could not speak Italian at all, I only spoke English. I was given the possibility to speak to her and understand well. She helped me when speaking to the police but also the practitioners. She never came to the camp [reception shelter], but she helped many times to understand things. It was an essential help for me all throughout the programme.[my translation from Italian] (interview Efe, 6 October 2020, entrance in 2018, +20 years)
I talk to her for regularisation and passport issues. When I meet the Case Managers, she is always present, but by now I can speak Italian and can manage by myself. To be sure we understand each other, Case Managers and practitioners always call a Mediators, but I am happier to do it by myself now, as I can understand well. The Mediator that helped me is really good, but I am a grown up![my translation from Italian] (interview, Esosa, 8 September 2020, entrance in 2017, 17 years)
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The paper acknowledges that the term “victim” is normative in nature. It is used in policy discourses, but it has been widely criticized in scientific debates. It represents people as powerless “victims”, in association with discretional procedures (for a reference to the debate, see Clemente 2022). I will occasionally use it, in inverted commas, whereby it was used by interviewees, in the literature, or in norms. Otherwise, I will prefer the terms Nigerian women, women, and women admitted to the anti-trafficking programme. The paper also acknowledges that the term “beneficiary” may misrepresent the people admitted to the anti-trafficking programme, whereby such programmes can rather disempower them. I do acknowledge the term must be problematised, as it involves an implicit assumption that such programmes are (entirely) beneficial to people. Hence, I will use this term only when used by practitioners, with reference to roles. |
2 | Arrivals of Nigerian women (and men) in Italy have been reported since the 1980s (Monzini 2002). However, attention on these flows grew towards the second decade of 2000, with increasing focus by European and Italian authorities on trafficking and exploitation. A peak of arrivals to Italy was recorded in 2015, 2016, and 2017 (Frontex 2018). Looking at the country of origin of the people registered as victims of trafficking in the EU, Nigeria was the first non-EU country (European Commission 2018), confirming trends in 2010 (Eurostat 2011). EU Commission data (2020) suggest arrivals have been decreasing since 2020, although these data does not account for movements within Europe, nor do they provide evidence of changing routes. Nigerian women have represented the main target of the N.A.Ve anti-trafficking programme (according to internal reports provided by the N.A.Ve professionals for the period 2016–2020). The same can be said for other anti-trafficking programmes in Italy (as confirmed by unpublished 2016–2020 internal data by the Osservatorio Interventi Anti-tratta in Italy). |
3 | For information on the project see the following website: https://www.insightproject.net/. |
4 | Details of the Research Ethics Committee approval are reported in the Institutional Review Board Statement at the end of this paper. |
5 | Two worked in Italy (Serena Caroselli, Serena Scarabello), together with the author, one in Nigeria (Oluwafemi Abe Moses), and one in Sweden (Isabelle Johansson). |
6 | More information is available at the link reported in Note 3. |
7 | From March to September 2020, most of the observation was performed on the zoom platform, due to the COVID-19 pandemic. |
8 | |
9 | These data draw from the annual reports compiled by the N.A.Ve professionals for the Italian Department of Equal Opportunities. These data are underestimated. They do not include the people who received some partial form of support by the N.A.Ve programme and who did not enter the full programme. |
10 | Full text available at this link: https://cnoas.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Il-nuovo-codice-deontologico-dellassistente-sociale.pdf Last access: 27 December 2023. |
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Semprebon, M. Protecting Protection Programmes or Engaging with People? Conditional Inclusion and Evolving Relational Dynamics in Anti-Trafficking Programmes. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13, 218. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040218
Semprebon M. Protecting Protection Programmes or Engaging with People? Conditional Inclusion and Evolving Relational Dynamics in Anti-Trafficking Programmes. Social Sciences. 2024; 13(4):218. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040218
Chicago/Turabian StyleSemprebon, Michela. 2024. "Protecting Protection Programmes or Engaging with People? Conditional Inclusion and Evolving Relational Dynamics in Anti-Trafficking Programmes" Social Sciences 13, no. 4: 218. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040218
APA StyleSemprebon, M. (2024). Protecting Protection Programmes or Engaging with People? Conditional Inclusion and Evolving Relational Dynamics in Anti-Trafficking Programmes. Social Sciences, 13(4), 218. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040218