ABSTRACT

Trafficking in human beings (THB) has been described as modern slavery. It is a serious criminal activity that has significant ramifications for the human rights of the victims. It poses major challenges to the state, society and individual victims. THB is not a static given but a constantly changing concept depending on societal changes and opinions, economic situations and legal developments. THB occurs both transnationally and within countries. The complexity of THB is such that it requires a wide range of expertise fully to address the phenomenon.

Edited by a team of leading international academics, the Routledge Handbook of Human Trafficking will provide an interdisciplinary introduction to THB. It is aimed at academics, students, research universities and non-governmental organisations, as well as policy makers. It will review THB through the lens of law, anthropology, social and political science and will address statistical, data protection issues and showcase the most effective research methods, analyse the various actors and stakeholders and the different types of exploitation of trafficked persons. It will critically highlight and analyse the most pressing current challenges posed by THB.

part 1|106 pages

International and regional regimes on anti-trafficking

chapter 6|10 pages

Human trafficking in the context of labour migration in Southeast Asia

The case of Thailand’s fishing industry

part 2|61 pages

Types of exploitation

part 4|79 pages

Needs of victims of trafficking

chapter 19|12 pages

Trafficking in persons

A victim’s perspective

chapter 22|18 pages

Being home

Exploring family reintegration amongst trafficked Indonesian domestic workers

chapter 24|13 pages

National Referral Mechanisms

part 5|61 pages

Critical discourses of the anti-trafficking framework

chapter 25|9 pages

Sex and work

Understanding sexual commerce in an era of ‘globalisation’

chapter 28|11 pages

Disrupting religious privilege

Code of conduct for religious institutions, faith communities and faith-based organisations for their work with survivors of forced labour, human trafficking and modern slavery 1

part 6|37 pages

Statistics, data and knowledge

part 7|53 pages

Actors, stakeholders and institutions

part 8|75 pages

Economic aspects

chapter 37|14 pages

Exploitation of migrant workers and trafficking in human beings

A nexus of the demand by employers, workers, and consumers

chapter 38|12 pages

Fifteen years lifting of the ban on brothels

The struggle of policy makers between sex workers as agents or victims

chapter 39|12 pages

A critical engagement with the “pull and push” model

Human trafficking and migration into sex work

chapter 40|15 pages

Of coyotes and caporali

How anti-trafficking discourses of criminality depoliticise mobility and exploitation