Sex trafficking is a form of human trafficking, which is defined by the United Nations (UN), in the Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime and the Protocols Thereto as:
I was considering broadening my thesis topic to include human trafficking, in the worry that sex trafficking alone will not provide enough data or data sets to complete a thesis on - it really hit me that I am actually researching something, not completing another regurgitating essay, or stating some facts in 2000 words. This has been a source of anxiety over the past few days, because I am not quite sure what I am setting out to achieve. I know I am very interested in this topic. But why?
I am interested in the interconnection between globalisation, economic and sex trafficking, because, in order to understand the issue from an Australian perspective, it is important to have an understanding of it in a global perspective. Understanding what is driving people to become traffickers and for people to be trafficked is an important consideration for developing appropriate laws and policies in Australia. If we are detect trafficked persons and immediately deport them, what does that achieve? As some of the reading stated (damn, this is when I should be referencing!) many women who are trafficked and return home end up being re-trafficked. There are reasons people are willing to travel internationally for work, regardless if they know the conditions or now, people are travelling for a reason. These reasons? Well, that is what I want to study more about.
- Are the purely economic? Are their socio-economic positions in their countries of origin so low they are required to leave their country and work? These seems to be a very feasible answer to me. Many people outside of the sex industry do it. I have know many people who have come and studied in Australia, with the hope of gaining employment, in order to earn more money and send it home to their families.
- Is there a gender specific reason, why is predominantly women who are trafficked? What is the link between patriarchy and sex trafficking? What is the link between gender specific violence and sex trafficking? Or, should the issue of sex trafficking be viewed a work related issue, an issue of exploitation based on migrating worker's rights? Or, is there a way to analyse this issue from both perspectives.
I am also interested in the response we, as a country and social work as a profession, give to those who are trafficked? What measures do we have in place to support victims? What are our policies? What is the funding available for services who work this area? What level of investigation occurs? And what is achieved through the Australian Federal Police investigating that occurs? Do we simply deport people? Can they reapply for refugee status if a false claim by the trafficker has already been rejected? So many questions. Which, I think... Is a good thing? As it is only week two. Better to have many, many questions, than none at all.
I am still left with the issue - what am I achieving? In what way am I helping the social work profession and marginalised individuals by conducting this research? What EVEN is this research? Am I looking at laws? Am I looking at prevalence? Can I look at all of these things?
Hopefully, in one weeks time I can have an answer. At the moment, I do not.
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