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
Thank you so much for reading!
Savannah Lane
These are all interesting, I didn't know several of these. I'm curious if there are similarities between the psychology of trafficking and abusive relationships? It seems like the two operate on similar levels.
ReplyDeleteThere is a common thread of devaluation and of manipulation of trust. This discussion has entered more into pop-culture as Brooke Axtell (a survivor of both domestic abuse and human trafficking) spoke at the Grammy's about authentic love and the necessity of victims to reach out for help and to find their voice. If you want to read some of the things she's written they've been complied here: http://brookeaxtell.com/writing/
DeleteThis is a very sobering topic. It's also very interesting, and, I think, crucial for the general population to be aware of. I can't wait to see what you do when you're on site. Until then, thank you for the information.
ReplyDeleteThank you for reading!
DeleteHey Savannah, this was very interesting and informative. Could you talk a little bit about Dr. Roe-Sepowitz's work?
ReplyDeleteNot important, but do you know if you can change the font on this theme at all? The all-caps thing is a little hard on the eyes. It's ok if you can't though, it's still readable!
Can't wait to see everything you do with this project, I know it will be great!
Dr. Roe-Sepowitz works with sexually abused children and adults and practices trauma reduction therapy. In addition to her work with trafficked individuals, she facilitates psychoeducation groups to women in settings such as prisons, residential programs, women's resource centers, and diversion programs.
DeleteAbout the font: I changed the theme; I was having difficulty adjusting the other one (I don't think it was built for this platform).
Thank you!
I'm so happy you're doing this project because, among with countless other things, it's one of those things that people don't but really should know about. I'm sure that once you get to work on-site you'll have many more stories to tell.
ReplyDeleteI completely agree that further outreach is necessary. Thank you so much for reading!
DeleteAlong the lines of your point number three, is trafficking more common within certain types of nations?
ReplyDeleteIt'll be great to see the research that you can conduct when you're on-site, as this is a topic that everyone should become more educated on.
Trafficking is more common in nations where there is a clear gender gap. If a woman is unable to become educated or to find a job with an adequate income to provide for herself it is more likely that victimization will occur. It also happens more frequently in developing countries, refugee zones, and impoverished areas.
DeleteDude I love love that you are pointing out these common misconceptions. I know that in discussions like these, when I tell people that sex trafficking also happens in developed countries, and to males as well as females, a lot of them just look at me and laugh.
ReplyDeleteIt's hard for a lot of people to imagine that something like this could be happening around them, and a lot of people like to think they know everything about a topic based on what they see in the movies. I'm glad you're having these discussions! Thank you for reading.
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