International Counter-Trafficking: A Zero-Sum Game?

A special issue of Social Sciences (ISSN 2076-0760). This special issue belongs to the section "International Migration".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 January 2024) | Viewed by 9042

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
Centro de Investigação e Estudos de Sociologia, ISCTE-Instituto Universitário de Lisboa (ISCTE-IUL), 1649-026 Lisboa, Portugal
Interests: trafficking and counter-trafficking; migration; sex work; qualitative research

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

“Human trafficking” is widely considered to be a fundamentally global issue, with counter-trafficking efforts having consolidated in many countries over the past two decades. Despite a large amount of public attention and widespread condemnation of the exploitation of individuals who move within and between nation-state boundaries, the mobilization of the idea of trafficking remains inherently problematic. One reason is that the motivations that have animated activists, non-governmental organizations and states to mobilize against trafficking differ, with some parties having sought the abolition of prostitution or attempted to exert more control over international mobility. Other considerations relate to the power gained and the business opportunities opened up for “legal” actors within counter-trafficking apparatuses, bringing few benefits to victims who often face abuses and violence within counter-trafficking. This situation, in different contexts, results in counter-trafficking efforts appearing to have become a zero-sum game, in which gains made by those who populate counter-trafficking apparatuses rarely trickle down to the “victims of trafficking”. This Special Issue aims to present evidence and debate on counter-trafficking apparatuses, reflecting on the different obstacles that create and maintain this controversial situation, undermining the basic rights of “victims” and many other people on the move who fall outside this category. It welcomes submissions from scholars, scholar-activists, and collaborations with other counter-trafficking actors to contribute empirical research on counter-trafficking and informing debates that can help make counter-trafficking something more than a controversial zero-sum game. We welcome papers that engage with critical trafficking, migration and border studies, especially in relation the following issues: The challenges faced by labour and migration rights activists and organizations, as well as sex workers and pro-sex work activists and organizations, in gaining access to and influencing counter-trafficking debates; Counter-trafficking organizations, their idea of trafficking, and relations with target groups/beneficiaries, states and other counter-trafficking actors; Current debate and conceptual issues around “vulnerability”, “coercion” and “exploitation”; The impact of recent political and social developments—from the development of the Global Compacts on Refugees and Migrants to the COVID-19 pandemic and the conflict in Ukraine—on the idea of “trafficking” and related counter-trafficking interventions.

Dr. Mara Clemente
Guest Editor

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Published Papers (6 papers)

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Editorial

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3 pages, 168 KiB  
Editorial
International Counter-Trafficking: A Zero-Sum Game?—Introduction to the Special Issue
by Mara Clemente
Soc. Sci. 2024, 13(7), 328; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13070328 - 24 Jun 2024
Viewed by 587
Abstract
“Human trafficking” is widely described as a matter of concern [...] Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue International Counter-Trafficking: A Zero-Sum Game?)

Research

Jump to: Editorial

15 pages, 303 KiB  
Article
Anti-Trafficking Professionals and Institutionalized Violence in Spain: An Exploratory Study
by Mara Clemente, Alba Sierra-Rodríguez and David Cairns
Soc. Sci. 2024, 13(6), 321; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060321 - 19 Jun 2024
Viewed by 912
Abstract
In recent decades, an anti-trafficking legislative and policy framework has been developed in Spain, coupled with the funding of initiatives related to the protection of trafficked persons, especially women, largely carried out by faith-based and secular organizations. Using 25 interviews conducted with people [...] Read more.
In recent decades, an anti-trafficking legislative and policy framework has been developed in Spain, coupled with the funding of initiatives related to the protection of trafficked persons, especially women, largely carried out by faith-based and secular organizations. Using 25 interviews conducted with people employed in programmes targeting trafficked women in the Autonomous Community of Madrid, this article provides deeper exploration of this under-studied subject with a view to gaining a better understanding of the work experiences of professionals involved in these initiatives, with special attention paid to the challenges they face in enacting anti-trafficking activities while avoiding producing violence on assisted persons. The experiences of these professionals highlight that the neoliberal outsourcing of services to non-governmental organizations nevertheless contributes towards making anti-trafficking an apparatus in which violence materializes and reproduces. Significantly, this violence involves not only the people who are being assisted as trafficking victims but also some anti-trafficking professionals. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue International Counter-Trafficking: A Zero-Sum Game?)
14 pages, 339 KiB  
Article
Begging for Knowledge in Senegal: Conflicting Understandings and Interests of the Dominant Anti-Trafficking Approach and Quranic Education
by Hamadou Boiro and Jónína Einarsdóttir
Soc. Sci. 2024, 13(6), 288; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060288 - 28 May 2024
Viewed by 1231
Abstract
Diverse actors, including foreign and national states, international agencies, donors, non-governmental organisations (NGOs), and private ventures, demand, fund, and implement anti-trafficking activities worldwide. Bissau-Guinean Quran schoolboys begging in Senegalese cities are defined as victims of child trafficking, and their teachers as traffickers. This [...] Read more.
Diverse actors, including foreign and national states, international agencies, donors, non-governmental organisations (NGOs), and private ventures, demand, fund, and implement anti-trafficking activities worldwide. Bissau-Guinean Quran schoolboys begging in Senegalese cities are defined as victims of child trafficking, and their teachers as traffickers. This article aims to explore the Quran teachers’ understanding of begging and their response to being accused of child trafficking. It rests on data collected during anthropological fieldwork in Guinea-Bissau and Senegal since 2009, including interviews and participation in religious events. The Quran teachers, some of whom admit colleagues might exploit their students, highlight four aspects of begging: allowing poor populations economically to study the Quran; contributing to humbleness, humility, and empathy with underprivileged groups; redistributing resources across generations; and allowing the acquisition of knowledge, liberation, and power. They maintain that the NGOs are profiting from funds provided to “rescue” the students and act as real traffickers, and together with funders, they aim to eliminate Islam. Embedded in layers of coloniality, the Quran teachers keep their position as community leaders. Banning begging is bound to fail if the anti-trafficking NGOs ignore their understanding of meaningful suffering and begging, including the economic and religious aspects of alms-seeking and its reciprocal nature. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue International Counter-Trafficking: A Zero-Sum Game?)
16 pages, 278 KiB  
Article
Protecting Protection Programmes or Engaging with People? Conditional Inclusion and Evolving Relational Dynamics in Anti-Trafficking Programmes
by Michela Semprebon
Soc. Sci. 2024, 13(4), 218; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040218 - 18 Apr 2024
Viewed by 1057
Abstract
Anti-trafficking programmes in Italy have been implemented for more than two decades. Yet, little empirical evidence is available regarding their functioning. This paper draws on 56 semi-structured interviews carried out in the period of 2019–2021 with practitioners and beneficiaries of the N.A.Ve anti-trafficking [...] Read more.
Anti-trafficking programmes in Italy have been implemented for more than two decades. Yet, little empirical evidence is available regarding their functioning. This paper draws on 56 semi-structured interviews carried out in the period of 2019–2021 with practitioners and beneficiaries of the N.A.Ve anti-trafficking programme. The interviews focused on practitioners’ experience working with Nigerian women and on Nigerian women’s experiences of the programme upon completion. By building on critical anti-trafficking studies and the autonomy of migration perspective, this contribution looks at the relationship between practitioners and Nigerian women admitted to the programme by addressing the following questions: what is the experience of practitioners and beneficiaries in the N.A.Ve programme? To what extent is the structural violence of the counter-trafficking apparatus reproduced in the relational dynamics between practitioners, particularly Case Managers, and beneficiaries? How do beneficiaries cope with such violence? I argue that the Case Managers’ approach builds on “stratified layers of institutional knowledge” and that this concept is useful to highlight how their knowledge derives both from the counter-trafficking apparatus and their social work background. Furthermore, I present evidence that such an approach reproduces structural violence through processes of “conditional inclusion”. Nigerian women denounced this violence but also seized the relational capital grown from rapport, calling for more engagement with people rather than programme objectives. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue International Counter-Trafficking: A Zero-Sum Game?)
14 pages, 306 KiB  
Article
Nigerian Migrant Women and Human Trafficking Narratives: Stereotypes, Stigma and Ethnographic Knowledge
by Estefanía Acién González
Soc. Sci. 2024, 13(4), 207; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040207 - 11 Apr 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1598
Abstract
During the last decades, Nigerian migrant women in the European sex market, described as victims of trafficking, have generated consistent concern and outrage. This article analyzes data from an ethnographic study of more than 800 Nigerian sex workers in southern Spain, describing the [...] Read more.
During the last decades, Nigerian migrant women in the European sex market, described as victims of trafficking, have generated consistent concern and outrage. This article analyzes data from an ethnographic study of more than 800 Nigerian sex workers in southern Spain, describing the networks used by these women to carry out their migration projects and the relationships they establish with their agents. Thus, it contributes to refuting the hegemonic narrative about trafficking and its victims by contrasting it with data collected and systematized over almost a decade of participant observation and informal conversation. This paper argues that the stereotypical image of the Nigerian migrant women as victims of abuse and violence by transnational trafficking networks functions to justify strict migration-control policies and the denial of labor rights to sex workers. As an antidote to the dominance of narratives based on stereotypes and pseudoscientific claims, this paper underscores the urgent need for ethnographic research and its focus on emic (participant) perspectives. The goal is to develop tailored and effective policies and practices for the prevention of and intervention in migrant women’s experience of exploitation, abuse, and violence. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue International Counter-Trafficking: A Zero-Sum Game?)
14 pages, 299 KiB  
Article
Excluded but Fighting: Where Are the Voices of Sex Workers and Their Allies in EU Anti-Trafficking Policymaking?
by Irena Ferčíková Konečná
Soc. Sci. 2024, 13(3), 148; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13030148 - 5 Mar 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2983
Abstract
The ‘end demand’ approach to prostitution has been popping up in Europe through the anti-trafficking debate and receives increasing attention on the international agenda. It is well recognized that improving workers’ rights, increasing unionization and collective bargaining coverage are effective strategies for tackling [...] Read more.
The ‘end demand’ approach to prostitution has been popping up in Europe through the anti-trafficking debate and receives increasing attention on the international agenda. It is well recognized that improving workers’ rights, increasing unionization and collective bargaining coverage are effective strategies for tackling trafficking. However, with regard to sexual exploitation, focus is not on these strategies but instead on the abolition of the entire sex industry with the help of criminal justice systems. In first decade after the Palermo Protocol (2000), international organizations (IGOs) promoted a human rights-based approach to tackling trafficking, aiming to balance the criminal justice focus of the protocol. This work guided states on how to maintain and protect human rights while combating human trafficking. However, the explosive issue of sex work/prostitution was minimized, with IGOs avoiding the topic due to the fragile consensus about the definition of human trafficking and state obligations. Meanwhile, sex workers’ collectives and unions globally and throughout Europe developed their own strategies on how to address widespread criminalization, discrimination, violence and exploitation, with no or very limited funding and resources—and without recognition of their work, experience and expertise. This article presents how the European Sex Workers’ Rights Alliance (ESWA) and other sex workers’ rights civil society organizations have sought to challenge the harmful impacts of the ‘end demand’ discourse and the criminalization of sex work in the name of anti-trafficking in Europe. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue International Counter-Trafficking: A Zero-Sum Game?)
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