Food for thought: modern day slavery -- Trafficking for sexual exploitation -- Food for thought: feminist dissentions on how should we address trafficking for sexual exploitation -- Trafficking for labor exploitation -- Food for thought: geopolitics, security, and trafficking for labor -- Organ trafficking -- Food for thought: if transplant registries exist in countries, should foreigners be able to receive transplants? -- The other side of trafficking: a look at the data and policies on trafficking -- UN reports on human rights and human trafficking -- Afterword: envisioning a trafficking-free world.
Summary:
"The last few decades have seen a huge increase in attention being paid to the trafficking of human beings, often referred to as modern-day slavery. A number of international and national policies and protocols have been developed and billions of dollars have been spent to combat the issue and protect trafficking victims. Yet it continues to flourish and human beings, both in the Global North and the Global South, continue to be degraded to the level of commodities, smuggled across borders for profit, trafficked for sex, labor, or their body parts. Drawing upon feminist and human rights approaches to trafficking, this book links the worlds of policy, protocols, and social structures with the lived experience and conditions of trafficked people."--Publisher's description.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.