Child trafficking activity often draws on formal administrative and legal resources. Formalisation implies considerable cooperation between public functionaries, lawyers and external actors. I argue that child rights advocates are forceful policy formulators who tend to ignore the public-external link because they focus on the external profit-seeking actors. The danger of this focus is a continuing production of inadequate policies, regulations and laws which are weak instruments in the control of a serious social and moral problem. I exemplify this by cases of irregularities in international adoption from Ecuador from the 1990s onwards.1. Journal compilation © 2008 National Children's Bureau.
CITATION STYLE
Leifsen, E. (2008). Child trafficking and formalisation: The case of international adoption from ecuador. Children and Society, 22(3), 212–222. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1099-0860.2008.00152.x
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