Millions of people around the world are forced to work without pay and under threat of violence. These individuals can be found working in brothels, factories, mines, farm fields, restaurants, construction sites and private homes: many have been tricked by human traffickers and lured by false promises of good jobs or education, some are forced to work at gunpoint, while others are trapped by phony debts from unscrupulous moneylenders.
The SAGE Handbook of Human Trafficking and Modern-Day Slavery provides a comprehensive, interdisciplinary and global look at the diverse issues surrounding human trafficking and slavery in the post-1945 environment. Covering everything from history, literature and politics to economics, international law and geography, this Handbook is essential reading for academics and researchers, as well as for policy-makers and non-governmental organisations
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Introduction – Jennifer B. Clark & Steve J. Shone
PART 1: Defining Contemporary Slavery
Chapter 1: Conceptualizing the Exploitation of Human Trafficking – Jean Allain
Chapter 2: International Legal Framework on Human Trafficking: Contemporary understandings and continuing confusions – Marika Mc Adam
Chapter 3: Assessing the Global Slavery Index – Monti Datta, Olivia Gustafson, Chloe Lubin-Kirchner, Gioia Kelleher & Rebecca Berg
Chapter 4: Empirical Research on Sex Work and Human Trafficking in Southeast Asia and a Critique of Methodologies for Obtaining Estimates of Human Trafficking Numbers – Thomas Steinfatt
PART 2: Forms of Human Trafficking and Contemporary Slavery
Chapter 5: Labour trafficking – Aidan Mc Quade
Chapter 6: Practices of Bonded Labour in India: Forms of Exploitation and Human Rights Violations – Arun Kumar Acharya & Diego López Naranjo
Chapter 7: The Evolving Concept of Worst Forms of Child Labor – Holly Cullen
Chapter 8: Organ Trafficking: Transplant Tourism and Trafficking in Persons for the Removal of Organs – Sean Columb
PART 3: The Context of Human Trafficking and Contemporary Slavery
Chapter 9: The business of human trafficking and modern slavery – Kam Phung & Andrew Crane
Chapter 10: Human Trafficking, Sexual Slavery, and Extremism – Gus Martin
Chapter 11: Human trafficking, modern day slavery and organized crime – James Finckenauer
Chapter 12: Migration and Trafficking: The Unintended Consequences of Security and Enforcement Frameworks and the Revictimization of Vulnerable Groups – Jennifer B. Clark & Steve J. Shone
PART 4: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Human Trafficking and Contemporary Slavery
Chapter 13: A Survivor Centric Approach: The Importance of Contemporary Slave Narratives to the Anti-Slavery Agenda – Andrea Nicholson
Chapter 14: Trafficking in Human Beings: The Convergence of Criminal Law and Human Rights – Roza Pati
Chapter 15: Pretty Vacant: Stolen Girls/Girlhoods in Anti-Trafficking Discourses – Treena Orchard
Chapter 16: Indigenous women in trafficking: links between race, ethnicity and class – Natividad Gutierrez Chong
PART 5: Case Studies
Chapter 17: The identification of trafficking victims in Europe and the former Soviet Union – Rebbeca Surtees & Anette Brunovskis
Chapter 18: Commercial Sexual Exploitation and Sex Trafficking of Children in the West African Region – Charles Hounmenou
Chapter 19: Identifying Human Trafficking Victims Under the Sharia Law in Iran – Roksana Alavi
Chapter 20: Impacts of Cultural Practices and Anti Trafficking Policies in South East Asia – Diego López Naranjo & Arun Kumar Acharya
Chapter 21: Human Trafficking in North America – Amy Farrell and Rebecca Pfeffer
Chapter 22: Legal Yet Enslaved: The Case of Migrant Farm Workers in the United States – Maria Elena Sandovici
Chapter 23: Australia’s response to human trafficking nationally and regionally: the question of impact – Heather Moore, Marie Segrave, Bodean Hedwards & Sanja Milivojevic
Chapter 24: Child Workers: An Ugly Face in the Labour Industry – Rashmi Pramanik
PART 6: Ending Contemporary Slavery
Chapter 25: The International Law Enforcement Community: Cooperative Efforts in Combating Human Trafficking – Rosalva Resendiz & Lucas E. Espinoza
Chapter 26: Identification, rescue and social intervention with the victims of trafficking for sexual exploitation in Spain – Carmen Meneses-Falcón and Jorge Uroz-Olivares
Chapter 27: Organizational Configurations in Providing Social Services and Advocacy to Victims and Survivors of Human Trafficking – Chie Noyori Corbett, Jessica Hernandez & David Moxley
Chapter 28: Contemporary social movements to end slavery – NGOs and beyond – Joanna Ewart-James & Matthew Fischer-Daly
เกี่ยวกับผู้แต่ง
Sasha Poucki Ph.D. is an independent researcher, co-founder of non-profit organization, Azimuth 180°, an educator, and consultant. He holds a Ph.D. in Global Affairs from The Division of Global Affairs (DGA) at the Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey and a J.D. from The University of Novi Sad, Serbia. Dr. Poucki’s research interests include topics related to human trafficking and modern-day slavery, the processes of globalization, human rights, vulnerability of minority groups, business ethics and corporate responsibility, irregular migration, technology and society, cybercrime and international relations. He has taught courses at several universities in New Jersey in fields of international relations and political science, political geography, humanities and world civilizations, environmental ethics, international business and management, history of American immigration, and human trafficking. Dr. Poucki has presented at several conferences, subject expert panels, training sessions, and published in academic journals. He was co-editor with Jennifer Bryson Clark of The SAGE Handbook of Human Trafficking and Modern-Day Slavery. Dr. Poucki has conducted sponsored research in the U.S., India, Philippines, Paraguay, Mexico, Serbia, Kosovo, Croatia, and Bi H.