Anti-Trafficking Professionals and Institutionalized Violence in Spain: An Exploratory Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction: Trafficking, Anti-Trafficking and Violence
1.1. The Spanish Context
2. Methodology
3. Results
3.1. Working in Anti-Trafficking: Stable Precariousness and Widespread Exploitation
I started with an internship. Then I continued as a volunteer and, after six months, they offered me a temporary contract of 20 h a week. I work within projects, with 20 h a week, and as a volunteer between one project and another.(Interview 15, October 2019)
My main function is to cover the central areas of the city and industrial polygons.5 I collaborate in all activities related to the topic of prostitution—European projects, network meetings, participation in conferences, etc. I started about three years ago as a volunteer for six months. Then I spent a year and a half abroad. When I returned, I took it up again as a volunteer. I have been working within this organization since April and was officially hired in September, because we were involved in a fairly extensive European project, and now I am working within it.(Interview 11, January 2019)
I was very good at it and could identify victims quickly. I spoke Romanian with them because many did not know how to express themselves in another language. During the interventions I felt very alone: when they [the victims] collapsed, I collapsed with them, and my colleagues thought it was better to leave us alone. After talking to the victims, I had to tell my colleagues what we had talked about and I had to write the report. Since I spoke Romanian, I was exploited to the maximum by the organization and when I couldn’t take it anymore, I had to leave.(Interview 15, October 2019)
[Within the organization] they expect us to perform the functions of social educators, but they hire us within the category of social educator assistant because the remuneration is lower. The salary tables and functions are totally different but we do reports, workshops and planning, all the things that are typical of social educators.(Interview 7, March 2020)
My position was that of a social worker even though I carried out the role of educator, because I often had to replace people who had left the organization and I knew how it worked. Without changing my contract, I worked as an educator.(Interview 4, July 2019)
3.2. Between “Protection” and Tensions, Conflicts and Institutional Violence
I had thirteen weekly contract hours, but of course in reality there were many more. It was a thirteen-hour contract with which I couldn’t make ends meet, with a totally horrible schedule in which my boss took advantage and told me, “What do you have left, three hours? Well, come here now because I need you to do, I don’t know what”.(Interview 24, May 2019)
There is not much understanding between the boss and some colleagues. There is not a good working environment. From the moment I started I had the feeling that there is a very strange atmosphere. People spoke in very low voices: when you enter a room, everyone immediately shuts up. There are many bad relationships between colleagues, especially among mediators. Some colleagues respond badly to you, they can offend you as if it were a normal thing. There is often a lot of pressure and if someone at the top finds out there has been a negative comment about the organization, they immediately come looking for you to find out what was said, who said it, etc. This seems to be the biggest concern of the organization: controlling all the time who says what, nothing else. There is a lot of pressure in a distressing atmosphere.(Interview 5, February 2020)
It is supposed to be an example for the sheltered women. An example of what is expected of them as women and thus teaching them to clean, to dress correctly, to adapt to Spanish culture. There was a coordinator who did not work at the shelter but her function included deciding which victims should continue to stay in the project, i.e., in the shelter. The choice is usually based on a completely subjective criteria, in favour of “non-problematic” women who knew Spanish. All this can have an impact on relationships within the shelter and with other workers. Educators do not always agree with what is asked by superiors but no one wants to have problems with them. The role of educators is limited to what is asked from above. What we end up doing is ensuring that even the assisted women comply with what is asked from above.(Interview 22, November 2019)
Assisted women are asked to engage in non-sexual behaviour. On two occasions we also had women who became pregnant and wanted to abort. It was done, but without the approval of the [religious order]. I interceded for the woman, and well, the coordinator took it personally. She told me that if I accompanied her to the hospital, she was going to personally ensure that I no longer worked in the organization, neither that one nor any of the rest of the agencies. Another time we had the case of a lesbian woman who had a Spanish partner and it was a very, very big conflict for the simple fact of being a lesbian. This accelerated her exit from the shelter. Sexuality is a taboo topic. Much more so if it is non-normative. Even for professionals, saying that you are lesbian has consequences. There are organized workshops, for example, but as a lesbian, I was not allowed to give any.(Interview 16, June 2019)
There is a lot of pressure in the activities we carry out. Colleagues tell you: “Mark ‘sexual exploitation’ because if you report ‘prostitution’ the lawyer will come and ask the reason for you reporting ‘prostitution’”. And they ask for marking women as “victims of trafficking”, especially if they had debt. They told us, “If there is debt, mark trafficking”.(Interview 5, February 2020)
The NGO almost encourages you to fight with the other [pro-sex work] NGOs. This says that “the other [pro-sex work] NGOs are only going to distribute material, so they are promoting prostitution”. This told you that: “If you arrive at a place and there is another [pro-sex work] NGOs there, well, they cannot be there because this area is ours, because we have been here since 1900”. One of the managers criticized a professional who had worked there but who was no longer working there saying that: “when this girl went out with the mobile unit, she sometimes referred the women to other different [that is, pro-sex work] NGOs”.(Interview 5, February 2020)
The organization discourages you from referring women to other [anti-trafficking] entities and organizations. Once we advised a woman to contact the municipality but they told us that before speaking to the municipality’s social worker, the victim had to be registered with [organization’s name]. The real aim of the intervention was for the women to contact [organization’s name] so that there can be a record stating that “she came that day and was assisted”, that’s it. Because project evaluations are done in quantitative terms. Therefore, it is not so much the quality of the intervention that matters, but the quantity of people registered as assisted.(Interview 24, May 2019)
3.3. Anti-Trafficking Professionals and Assisted Women
The rotation of educators is a problem. They leave very soon, after an average of about three months. It happens that assisted victims are sick and tired of changing reference figures, reference educators, to whom at a certain moment in time they need to talk to about their history. They are fed up with always telling the same things to different people, generating a bond that will be broken after three months, and then seeing new educators arrive. They say, “Don’t take it personally, it’s just that we are sick and tired of opening up, of trusting, after what we have been through and, after three months, doing it again with new people”.(Interview 7, March 2020)
[Sheltered women] get up between 7am and 7:30am and they have to clean the kitchen, living room, hallways, bathrooms, every day. Everything every day! Who cleans their house before going to work every day, all the rooms in the house at 7am? Nobody. But they have to do it! This happens to them because they come from the sex market and it is an almost classist perspective. If they do not want to have dinner, our superiors tell us: “Girls, even if she does not want to have dinner, you have to force her to have dinner because they are healthy habits, because of where they come from”.(Interview 7, March 2020)
We cleaned the shelter more than our houses so that there would be no problems with the management. I remember cleaning the floor on my knees. These are the rules of the shelter, so it is complicated. Then also, they could not drink alcohol. I am not talking within the shelter. It is not allowed to drink anything outside either.(Interview 22, November 2019)
The organization pays their fees as well as something the women need to pay. However, when the victims leave the shelter or find some employment or some type of economic income, they are charged for these expenses. Nobody explains it to them clearly, but when they are going to enter the world of work and have some kind of money, they have to pay. And then the problems begin.(Interview 4, July 2019)
We stopped doing workshops. The women were very confrontational and that was horrible. There was a lack of resources, even of food, and we suffered from all of that. In the end, who stands up if there is no food? Well, you!(Interview 8, November 2019)
And I am softening it for you. She was the woman the organization used to spy on the social workers. If we slept at night, what we did, how we intervened. And they yelled at us depending on what that woman and another Nigerian woman said.(Interview 8, November 2019)
4. Concluding Remarks
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | We occasionally use quotation marks to emphasise the fact that we are not taking for granted the meaning of certain terms and expressions. |
2 | For readers not familiar with the Spanish context, it may be useful to know that that of Madrid is one of the Autonomous Communities into which Spain is politically and administratively organized, in accordance with the 1978 Constitution, with the aim of guaranteeing limited autonomy of the nationalities and regions that make up the country. |
3 | These are the following organizations: ACCEM; Association for the Prevention, Reintegration and Care of Prostituted Women (APRAMP); Auxiliaries of The Good Pastor-Villa Teresita; Cáritas Spain; Commission for the Investigation of Mistreatment of Women (CIMT); Commission of Spain for the Assistance to Refugees (CEAR); Concepción Arenal; Diaconía; Doctors of the World; Esperanza Project; Fiet Gratia NGO; Oblate Sisters; Spanish Red Cross; White Cross Foundation; Women in Conflict Zone (WCZ). |
4 | In greater detail, two participants have work experience in ACCEM, six in APRAMP, six in Commission for the Investigation of Malpractice in the Woman, one in Concepción Arenal, one in Doctors of the World, seven in the Esperanza Project and two in the Spanish Red Cross. |
5 | Industrial polygons are peripheral spaces in the urban environment that have a precise delimitation, derived from a specific planning action whose purpose is to concentrate productive activities in a specific space so that they can share common resources and services, avoiding the environmental and landscape impact that arises from the territorial dispersion of companies in the territory. |
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Clemente, M.; Sierra-Rodríguez, A.; Cairns, D. Anti-Trafficking Professionals and Institutionalized Violence in Spain: An Exploratory Study. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13, 321. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060321
Clemente M, Sierra-Rodríguez A, Cairns D. Anti-Trafficking Professionals and Institutionalized Violence in Spain: An Exploratory Study. Social Sciences. 2024; 13(6):321. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060321
Chicago/Turabian StyleClemente, Mara, Alba Sierra-Rodríguez, and David Cairns. 2024. "Anti-Trafficking Professionals and Institutionalized Violence in Spain: An Exploratory Study" Social Sciences 13, no. 6: 321. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060321
APA StyleClemente, M., Sierra-Rodríguez, A., & Cairns, D. (2024). Anti-Trafficking Professionals and Institutionalized Violence in Spain: An Exploratory Study. Social Sciences, 13(6), 321. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060321