Publication
2006
This paper outlines the standard national and international countertrafficking regimes and analyzes the limitations of these approaches. According to the author, women trafficking reflects cultural practices while strong economic incentives further reinforce the current forms of trafficking. In the second section, using examples from field-work in Serbia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, the author analyzes three different forms of trafficking exchanges. Finally, the paper suggests some interventions to address trafficking from an economic rights and human security perspective.
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English (PDF, 32 pages, 355 KB) |
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Author | Lynellyn D Long |
Series | Ford Institute for Human Security Working Papers |
Issue | 5 |
Publisher | Ford Institute for Human Security |
Copyright | © 2006 Ford Institute for Human Security |