To Protect and Responsibilize: The Discursive Explosion of Combining Youth Sexuality, Human Trafficking, and Online Spaces
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Published:2021-08-01
Issue:1
Volume:33
Page:58-83
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ISSN:0832-8781
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Container-title:Canadian Journal of Women and the Law
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Canadian Journal of Women and the Law
Author:
Roots Katrin,Lockhart Emily
Abstract
The emergence of social media and digital technologies has resulted in new protectionist laws, policies, and mandates aimed at regulating the sexual behaviour of women and girls in online spaces. These neoliberal responsiblization strategies are aimed at shaping good, young digital citizens and have become further amplified through increased concerns about domestic human trafficking and victim vulnerability. This protectionism, however, is not always reflected in courtroom proceedings, revealing a tension between the protection and responsiblization of victims of trafficking in Canada. Using R v Oliver-Machado (2013) as a case study, we examine the ways in which the defence counsel’s reliance on commonplace defence tactics used in sexual assault cases responsibilize the young complainants in an attempt to discredit their victimhood and reconstruct them as online sexual risk takers.
Publisher
University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)
Subject
Law,Sociology and Political Science,Gender Studies