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Offers the most comprehensive, living, reference work on human trafficking and slavery on the market
Covers everything from: historical perspectives, methods of enquiry, types of trafficking, country profiles, the work of NGOs, and recommendations for controlling human trafficking
Includes contributions from actively engaged scholars and practitioners who are experts in human trafficking, covering both popular and under-explored topics
Auteur
John Winterdyk is Professor of Criminology at Mount Royal University, Calgary. He has been engaged in research and writing on the subject of human trafficking since approximately 2004. In addition to being lead co-editor (with B. Perrin and P. Reichel) of the book Human Trafficking: Exploring the International Nature, Concerns, and Complexities (CRC Press, 2012), he also co-edited a special issue on human trafficking for the European Criminology Journal (2010), which was, as of 2015, the most widely accessed issue in the history of the journal. John has also co-authored several related journal articles. In 2019, he served as a guest editor for special issues on human trafficking for the Canadian Justice Report. Currently, he serves as the book review editor for the Journal of Human Trafficking and was a Director of ACT (Action Coalition on Human Trafficking). In April 2016, John co-facilitated (with Professor Jackie Jones Bristol University) an international workshop on child trafficking at the Oñati International Institute for the Sociology of Law in Spain and produced a number of entries for different publications. Along with Jackie Jones, he also edited Human Trafficking: Opportunities and Challenges in the 21st Century (Lambert Academic Publishing, 2018). John has also presented on the topic at numerous international conferences over the past 12 years and in 2018 conducted a week long workshop on human trafficking in India after being awarded a GIAN grant.
Jackie Jones is a Member of the European Parliament for Wales (MEP) and former Professor of Feminist Legal Studies at the University of the West of England, Bristol. Until her election in May 2019, she had been researching and writing about human rights and equalities, especially women's rights, since the late 1990s. Latterly, she focused on ending violence against women and girls. She has written several pieces about human trafficking and helpedprogress laws and policies in Wales on human trafficking. She was an activist until her election, attending/presenting at the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women each year, bringing students to present and gain experience as well as to meet international NGO delegates working in the sector. She was President of European Women Lawyers Association and visiting scholar at universities in Germany and France. She has given evidence in Westminster and Wales to government and has often been invited as expert to UK government, European Commission, and European Institute for Gender Equality meetings regarding equality and ending violence against women and girls. As MEP she sits on the Women's Rights and Equality and Legal Affairs Committees of the European Parliament.
Section Editors:
Suman Kakar - Florida International University, USA
Beatri Kruger - FS Centre for Human Rights, University of the Free State, South Africa
Laura Lammasniemi - Universityof Warwick, UK
Georgios Papanicolaou - Teeside University, UK
Joan Phillips - University of the West Indies, Barbados
Masja van Meeteren, University of Leiden, The Netherlands
Marcel van der Watt, University of South Africa, South Africa
Contenu
Part 1: History of Slavery and Trafficking in Persons.- 1. The evolution of slavery: From antiquity to Contemporary times.- 2. Globalization and Human Trafficking: Slavery in the 21st Century.- 3. Resistance and the Enslaved.- Part 2: Explanations and methods of inquiry.- 1. The nebulous definition of slavery: Definitions of slavery.- 2. Measuring immeasurable.- 3. Data and methods used.- 4. Ethical questions related to the research.- 5. Developing a universal standard of care for victims of trafficking under the guise of torture trauma.- 6. Corporate criminal liability for human trafficking.- 7. Corruption and human trafficking.- Part 3: Types of trafficking in human beings.- 1. The Confused and Erratic Response to Migrant Smuggling, Human Trafficking and the Mass Movement of Refugees.- 2. The challenge of addressing both forced labour and sexual exploitation.- 3. Telling Victims from Criminals: Human Trafficking for the Purpose of CriminalExploitation.- 4. Defining child trafficking for labour exploitation, forced child labour and child labour.- 5. Child soldiers.- 6. Organ, tissue, cell trafficking.- 7. Domestic Sex Trafficking of Youth.- 8. Family violence and exploitation: examining the contours of violence and exploitation.- 9. Sex trafficking.- 10. From the Street Corner to the Digital World: How the Digital Age Impacts Sex Trafficking Detection and Data Collection.- 11. The onset of global violent extremism and its nexus with human trafficking.- 12. Transplant tourism and human trafficking.- 13. Forced Marriage.- 14. Potentially: Consent in Human Trafficking.- Part 4: Human Trafficking and response mechanisms.- 1.The Nordic Model.- 2.Creating Sanctuary: Trauma-Informed Change for Survivors of Sex Trafficking and Commercial Sexual Exploitation.- 3.Human Rights vs. Prosecution.- 4.The United Nation's 4Ps model in response to human trafficking etc.