Traffic violations: Determining the meaning of violence in sexual trafficking versus sex work

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Abstract

This contribution will consider the current linkages among migration, sex work, trafficking in persons, and violence. Efforts to end trafficking in persons are perhaps the most important contribution to antiviolence program design in the global arena over the past decade. Significant funding and technical assistance are flowing to organizations to prevent and alleviate the effects of trafficking, and new legislative regimes have been established within countries and globally (e.g., the 2002 UN Crimes Commission's Protocol on Trafficking in Persons). To explore how trafficking and international sex trade issues converge, the author draws on participant observation in international debates such as Beijing Plus Five and the Crimes Commission from 2000 to 2001, on interviews with key figures in the antitrafficking world and with sex-worker rights advocates, and on program documentation.

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Saunders, P. (2005). Traffic violations: Determining the meaning of violence in sexual trafficking versus sex work. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 20(3), 343–360. https://doi.org/10.1177/0886260504272509

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