Sunday, March 22, 2015

Fifth and Sixth Weeks

Hello!
The past two weeks I've started becoming more involved at my internship: I sat in on meetings with my onsite adviser and the various other groups she is affiliated with and a training for healthcare providers in Gila River. It was really interesting seeing how the office operated and hearing about the projects that are currently going on.
Two projects that are interesting (that readers could get involved with) are the ask me campaign and the starfish bracelets. The ask me campaign is one where participants receive training on what human trafficking is, what some signs are, and how people can prevent or report it. Once this training is completed, the participants are given an ask me bracelet of their own and encouraged to spread the knowledge. The starfish bracelet is more of a fundraiser: the bracelets are made by various people around the office I'm working at and by survivors of sex trafficking. The proceeds from the sales of the bracelets are all put towards a pop-up drop-in center where victims of sex trafficking can receive everything from a shower and a meal to comprehensive medical care to resume building training to connections to other, more permanent, outreach facilities.
I also am involved with two research projects, one that I am working on with other interns and another I am working on alone. The project I am working on alone is looking at current harm reduction measures in sex work and how to use the information available to best help people who are unable or unwilling to leave sex work. I am looking at 29 websites across 25 cities (a few are national) and looking at data about bad dates going back several years. I am then inputting this data into Excel. I should be done capturing the data sometime this week and will then start analysis.
I am really loving going to work and even the casual conversation around the office is incredibly interesting and stimulating.
Thank you so much for reading!
Savannah

Sunday, March 8, 2015

Fourth Week

Hello readers:
Happy International Women's Day!
I had the pleasure of going in this past week and meeting with Dr. Roe-Sepowitz and my fellow interns. Everyone was incredibly passionate about the work we're doing and was super friendly and fun to work with. I also have a better idea of what I'm doing on-site! My research will be mainly focused on human trafficking; I will be reviewing past human trafficking convictions (with the hopes of creating a map showing trends of convictions within the United States) as well as case studies of trafficked individuals (to better understand what trafficked individuals go through). The office I am working in is the Social Work department, so I am also being exposed to studies on other forms of exploitation like porn culture.
The office is incredibly busy, but everyone is more than willing to explain and train you on things (I understand Excel more intimately than I ever have before). It's been amazing so far, and I am very excited to delve into research with them next week!
I got a stack of pamphlets while I was at the office and I'll share some facts from them with you here:
1. According to the pamphlet "Exploring the Impact of the Super Bowl on Sex Trafficking 2015", the sex market has grown since last year (with ad volume up 30.3% and buyer volume up 22% in Phoenix), 65% of the ads were marked as possible victims of sex trafficking and these were more likely to have a non-local area code, and many potential sex buyers are contacting ads from local area codes.
2. Homeless, runaway, throwaway, and youth in foster care are the most vulnerable population of youth at risk for sex trafficking. It is estimated that 1.6 million youth run away in a year, and that many of these kids will trade sex for food, clothing, or (most frequently) shelter.
3. In pamphlets such as "What You Need to Know: Sex Trafficking and Sexual Exploitation, a Training Tool for Mental Health Providers" and "What You Need to Know: Sex Trafficking and Sexual Exploitation, a Training Tool for Child Protective Services", it talks about the importance of trauma-informed care to reduce blame and shame felt by victims. Common mental health indicators of trafficking can include: post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety disorder, panic disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, dissociative disorder, major depressive disorder, substance abuse disorder, explosive disorders/violence, and intermittent explosive disorder.
Thank you for reading!
Savannah Lane

Saturday, February 28, 2015

Sunday, February 22, 2015

Second Week

What is Domestic Violence?
Common misconceptions:

  1. Domestic violence is unusual or only happens to poor women and women of color

  1. Alcohol, drug abuse, stress, and mental illness cause domestic violence (by causing the person to suddenly become violent)

  1. Both parties usually hold some responsibility in domestic violence situations

  1. Men are never victims of abuse, and women never perpetrators

  1. People who commit intimate partner violence are violent in most of their relationships

  1. Calling the police or leaving the situation is an obvious choice

Reality

  1. One in four (between 25 and 31 percent of) US women and one in seven men report being a victim of domestic violence at some point in their lives according to the National Domestic Violence Hotline and sources such as Safe Horizon. While people can become victims of domestic violence regardless of their age, sex, gender, ethnicity, or socioeconomic status, people who have greater economic independence may be more likely to escape the situation and to ask for help. According to the article Development and Preliminary Psychometric Evaluation of the Domestic Violence—Related Financial Issues Scale written by Weaver, T. L., Sanders, C. K., Campbell, C. L., & Schnabel, M., “Women’s economic status is linked to domestic violence in three primary ways. First, although domestic violence occurs across socioeconomic classes, poorer women are more likely to be survivors of domestic abuse than wealthier women... Second, women who are economically dependent on their abusers are less able to leave and more likely to return to abusive partners. Further, the degree of women’s economic dependence on an abuser is associated with the severity of the abuse they suffer. Greater economic dependence is associated with more severe abuse. Third, economic abuse is in itself a form of domestic abuse since abusive partners may act in ways that harm women financially and undermine their ability to become financially independent. Examples of economic abuse include limiting women’s access to funds and undermining their ability to gain employment or attend school”. Abuse can also be especially harmful in the LGBTQ+ community, as the methods of isolation and control that are used in these relationships further isolate the individuals from the community and abusive partners can play on the risk of outing or undermine the abused individuals identity (this is especially harmful if the victim has had relationships in the past that contrast with their current identity or if the victim currently presents in a way that they have not always presented). For more information on this kind of abuse you can go here: http://www.thehotline.org/is-this-abuse/lgbt-abuse/.

  1. These are all common excuses for the behavior, but they are rarely the cause. Domestic violence is usually caused by a need to control the situation and people around them or by the abuser having been subjected to an environment where they learned abusive behaviors as correct behaviors. In the experience of a man who worked for the National Domestic Violence Hotline: “There are a lot of strategies that an abusive partner uses in order to control their partners aside from physical violence — verbal abuse, isolation, controlling the finances, reproductive coercion, sabotaging birth control so a partner gets pregnant and he's saying she has to stay home with the baby. It's not usually a one-time incident. Maybe there was one physical abuse incident, but she usually speaks to the isolation, the verbal abuse, the fear, the threats”. The abuser is usually in control of all aspects of the situation and the victim. Easy ways to tell the difference between an abusive encounter and a person who was truly out of control or angry: during the incident a) did they hurt or break anything that they would consider theirs? b) did they show remorse before or after the situation was cleaned up?. A truly out of control person would be unable to discern between their possessions and others and would thus inevitably harm something of theirs. If they always calm down and show remorse after incidents are fully cleaned up as opposed to offering to help as soon as they have calmed down it is another warning sign that things might not have been as out of control as they seemed.

  1. Some violent situations are cases of two equally violent parties getting into a physical fight. It would be easy to paint intimate abuse in this way. It can seem like an argument or a fight; it can look like there is an agitator and a responder and that both parties have equal roles in perpetuating the abuse. However, this is completely inaccurate. Abuse is never the abused fault. Domestic violence describes any situation where one person deliberately and consistently hurts another. It has many forms: physical abuse (which is the most reported), stalking, sexual abuse, incest, and verbal/emotional abuse. There is no rational reason to emotionally manipulate someone, to beat someone, to hold someone financially hostage, to dictate what they can or cannot do with their own body. So why does it happen? Why do people think that abuse can be double sided? Studies have shown that this violence is more likely to occur if the subject or the victim of the violence is treated as a part of a minority group - one which experiences discrimination or exclusion from social capital based on one or more observable human characteristics, including, but not limited to: ethnicity, race, gender, wealth, health or sexual orientation. When women are demonized or infantilized it becomes easier to justify their abuse. When women are infantilized it seems easy to assume that they want someone to order them around to protect them from themselves, much as you would a misbehaving child. When women are demonized, it is easy to pretend their experiences did not actually occur. Anti-feminist groups have suggested that domestic violence is mutual fighting that a women has lied about to get something — immigration status, child custody, revenge. This is baseless and trivializes the experience of victims (regardless of their gender) because it assumes that anyone that comes forward about their abuse is doing so not because they need help but because they want something. It is easier to ignore the problem and blame it on the lying woman than to acknowledge that there are problems in how our society views the individuals within it. Men have fewer reported instances, and it is speculated that this is because they feel that coming forward about domestic violence at the hands of a female partner would make them less masculine or less fit in some manner.

  1. Anyone can be a victim of abuse. To say otherwise is to allow people to be abused in silence and to refuse help to people who have been traumatized. You could be a 300 pound bodybuilder and be abused by your 90 pound partner. Abuse is more than just physical.

  1. It is easy to paint abusive partners as monsters or to villainize them for their actions. To do so is to simplify the process overmuch; while abusive partners are actively trying to bring harm to one of their partners they might be absolutely charming and kind when they are in another environment. There are lots of examples about men who are abusive of their wife or girlfriend but who everyone thinks is a great guy and a great date because they can manipulate the situation to look like their partner is having fun and enjoying themselves.
  2. There are many reasons that a person would decide to stay in an abusive relationship, and while it would be ideal for everyone to be able to leave easily and call the police after an incident, it is not always feasible. Some victims of abuse fall for their abuser and do not want to leave. Abusers sometimes use something called trauma bonding, a technique whereby they cause severe emotional or physical damage and then help the person recover and coddle them so that they grow to love their abuser. A main factor in the abuse is often isolation and the tearing down of the victim’s self esteem. This ensures that the victim feels too powerless to run or that, if they can manage the courage to run, they will feel like they have nowhere to run to. Sometimes victims stay for their children or for fear their abuser will hurt someone else close to them or kill them if they try to leave. This fear is not unfounded; most women who die at the hands of an intimate partner have already left the relationship. One of the biggest problems with people in these relationships is that the victim might not have the resources to leave. By refusing to let the victim work, freezing their bank account or monitoring access heavily, refusing to let the victim use phones or the internet, or by screening the contact that the victim has with the outside world it becomes almost impossible for the victim to get the help they need to leave the situation.

If you want more information, the National Domestic Violence Hotline website is fantastic and very easy to navigate: http://www.thehotline.org/. Thank you so much for reading!

Savannah Lane

Sunday, February 15, 2015

First Week

My onsite internship with Dr. Dominique Roe-Sepowitz cannot begin until I turn eighteen, so I’m filling the interim by reading research already done on the subject found at the Glendale Community College library.
On my first day of independent research leading up to the start of my internship, I began with a stack of books: each one talking about human trafficking, sex trafficking, labor trafficking, the process of commodifying persons and using their bodies to make a profit. Human trafficking is a business; it follows the principles of supply and demand, and the misconceptions surrounding human trafficking allow many traffickers to escape charges pressed against them.
What is Human Trafficking?
Common misconceptions:

1) Human trafficking is any sort of illegal transport of humans, and consent to be smuggled is the same as consent to be trafficked (if you knew you were going to be working as a domestic servant, you signed up for the situation and you should have known better)

2) Trafficked people are all undocumented immigrants

3) It only happens in developing nations to poor, uneducated women and girls

4) There has to be physical restraint or bondage for the person to be enslaved

5) Human trafficking is synonymous with sex trafficking

Reality:

1)       A lot of the misconceptions come from confusing human trafficking with smuggling, as both definitions involve the transfer or harboring of individuals. Smuggling is different from trafficking, however, in that smuggling always involves transnational movement and trafficking can occur within a country’s borders. Smuggling does not carry with it the promise of exploitation, either. Smuggled persons have freedom of movement and the ability to change employment (as their relationship with their smuggler is often terminated upon reaching their destination) and, while they are performing an illegal action, are not always victims of human trafficking: this boundary is blurred when the consent they originally gave to be transported to work in another country is found to have been violated or to have occurred under duress or false pretenses.

2)      Trafficking can and does occur within countries. Renting Lucy by Linda Smith tells the story of girls and women in America who were coerced to leave their homes and to perform commercial sex work without pay or protection from anyone other than their pimp. The story in the book is not an unusual one, however. According to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, there are an estimated 100,000 – 300,000 children trafficked in the United States today. The average age a person in Arizona is first trafficked is 14.

3)      There are national and international definitions of human trafficking, as human trafficking is both a local and a global issue. The United Nations defines human trafficking as “recruitment, transfer, harboring, or receipt of persons by threat or use of force”. The U.S. State Department’s Trafficking Victim’s Protection Act of 2000 (TVPA) describes severe forms of trafficking as: a) sex trafficking in which a commercial sex act is induced by force, fraud or coercion, or in which the person induced to perform such an act has not yet attained 18 years of age; or b) the recruitment, harboring, transportation, provision, or obtaining of a person for labor or services, through the use of force, fraud, or coercion for the purpose of subjection to involuntary servitude, peonage, debt bondage, or slavery. Trafficking victims are sold into slavery; slaves are trafficked people; the two are inseparable and by misrepresenting trafficking victims as servants or willing participants we are doing a gross injustice to all those who are victims. And the list of potential victims is a long one. Slaves can look like the sixteen year old boy doing farm work or washing dishes, the fifty year old woman buying groceries or watching children on a playground, the twelve year old girl with a significantly older boyfriend and a new purse. The Slave Next Door by Kevin Bales and Ron Soodalter tells the story of several victims in the United States: a group of girls who were stolen from their homes in the Midwest, threatened, beat, made to sell wares at a nearby mall, and forced to dance, strip, and have sex with countless men; a small girl named Maria who was bought from her parents, beaten, fed dog feces, and forced to work up to twenty hours a day as a domestic servant for a middle class woman in Texas; Antonio, a man who could not afford to take care of his elderly and sick parents, who accepted money from a man to pay his parents medical bills and wound up picking tomatoes in Florida for 16 hours a day making far below minimum wage.

4)      While it is not uncommon for trafficked persons to be bound or for their movements to be restricted to a small guarded space, there is no requirement that they be physically restrained in order to qualify as trafficked. Many traffickers keep their victims through coercion, abuse, false promises, and debt. In the case of Star, one of the girls in Renting Lucy and many other sex trafficked persons, the pimp promised love and affection, rewarded her for making money by buying her purses or paying for her to get her hair and nails done, and by apologizing and soothing her after he hit her for acting out of line.

5)      Human trafficking includes sex trafficking, labor trafficking, and domestic servitude.

Thank you so much for reading!

Savannah Lane

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Introduction

Hello!

My name is Savannah Lane and I'm a senior at BASIS Scottsdale. I've been interested in human trafficking and domestic violence since 2011, when I attended a convention about global issues. I have been granted on this subject and have spoken at schools to raise awareness about human trafficking among Arizona youth. As a senior at BASIS, I am given a unique opportuny to pursue greater knowledge in this area and to dedicate more time to this subject.

I am working with Mr. Peacher, a math and statistics teacher at my school, and my on-site advisor Dr. Dominique Roe-Sepowitz, a professor at ASU. I am going to link my proposal to this blog post if you would like a more in-depth look at what I will be working on during the next couple of weeks.
As a brief overview: while researching human trafficking, I noticed that a lot of the materials are not directed towards youths but rather towards parents, doctors, or teachers. While the information is critical for these groups, most of the people affected directly by human trafficking are youths (the average age of an individual in Arizona who has been trafficked is 14). I became passionate about sharing this information with middle and high school students. Partway through my journey as a speaker, I decided I wanted to get involved in the current research in this field, so I reached out to professors at local universities and Dr. Roe-Sepowitz graciously accepted me. This research will be about trends in human trafficking and domestic violence, and will be either confirming, refuting, or further exploring some of the known "facts" about human trafficking.

Thank you so much for reading, and I hope to engage in dialogue with you all over the next few weeks.

Savannah Lane