The Trafficking Continuum: Service Providers’ Perspectives on Vulnerability, Exploitation, and Trafficking

Author:

Schwarz Corinne1,Alvord Daniel2,Daley Dorothy3,Ramaswamy Megha4,Rauscher Emily5,Britton Hannah2

Affiliation:

1. Center for Gender and Sexualities Studies, Marquette University, Milwaukee, WI, USA

2. Department of Sociology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, USA

3. School of Public Affairs and Administration and Environmental Studies Program, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, USA

4. Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, University of Kansas School of Medicine, Kansas City, KS, USA

5. Department of Sociology, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA

Abstract

Much of the research on human trafficking focuses on the prosecution of traffickers and protection of survivors after the crime has occurred. Less is known about the social disparities that make someone vulnerable to trafficking. This project examines human trafficking from a preventive focus, using data from a case study of service providers working with at-risk populations in the Kansas City, MO-KS area. The research team conducted 42 in-depth interviews with service providers working in the medical, educational, legal, and social services sectors from 2013 to 2016. Participants identified risk factors that could make someone vulnerable to labor or sexual exploitation. These factors clustered into four key areas: economic insecurity, housing insecurity, education, and migration. The research findings also suggest that human trafficking may be driven by an accumulation of risk factors that move vulnerable persons closer to labor exploitation and sex trafficking, fitting with a chain-of-risk model. We propose a model that reconceives of trafficking as a continuum that includes a range of vulnerabilities, violence, and traumas. In order to address human trafficking, policy makers and advocates need to focus on upstream prevention factors to address vulnerabilities that can lead to sex and labor exploitation.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Gender Studies

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