Buch, Englisch, 1582 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm, Gewicht: 2834 g
Buch, Englisch, 1582 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm, Gewicht: 2834 g
Reihe: Critical Concepts in Criminology
ISBN: 978-1-138-96216-3
Verlag: Routledge
The collection is fully indexed and supplemented with a comprehensive introduction, newly written by the editor, which places the gathered materials in their historical and intellectual context. Human Trafficking will be particularly useful as a database allowing scattered and often fugitive material to be easily located. It will also be welcomed as a crucial tool permitting rapid access to less familiar—and sometimes overlooked—texts. For scholars, students, and policy-makers, it is an essential one-stop research and pedagogic resource.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Section 1. Human Trafficking. An Overview.
- UNODC, Global Report on Trafficking in Persons, 2014, pp. 23-58.
- K. Marsh et al, ‘An Evidence Assessment of the Routes of Human Trafficking into the UK’, Home Office (Occ. Paper 103) 2012, pp. 1-30.
- House of Commons Home Affairs Committee, ‘The Trade in Human Beings: Human Trafficking in the UK’, (6th Report of Session) The Stationery Office. 2009, pp. 4-20.
- H. J. Clawson et al, ‘Human Trafficking into and within the USA: A Review of the Literature’, (US Department of Health and Human Services, 2009), pp. 1-55.
- UKHTC, ‘A Strategic Assessment on the Nature and Scale of Human Trafficking in 2012’, SOCA, 2013, pp. 5-26.
- A. Di Nicola, ‘Researching Human Trafficking: Issues and Problems’, in M. Lee (ed.), Human Trafficking (Willan, 2007), pp. 49-72.
- R. Weitzer, ‘New Directions in Research on Human Trafficking’, The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences 653, 2014, 6-24.
- E. Gozdziak, ‘Data Matter: Issues and Challenges for Research on Trafficking’, in M. Dragiewicz (ed.), Global Human Trafficking: Critical Issues and contexts. Routledge, 2015), pp. 23-38.
- D. F. Haynes, ‘The Celebritization of Human Trafficking’, The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences 653, 2014, 25-45.
Section 2. Victims and Perpetrators.
- S. Webb and J. Burrows, ‘Organised Immigration Crime: A Post-conviction Study’, Home Office Research Report. No.15. 2009, pp. 1-44.
- A. Ahmed and M. Seshu, ‘"We have the Right not to be ‘Rescued`…" When Antitrafficking Programs Undermine the Health and Well-being of Sex Workers’, in M. Dragiewicz (ed.), Global Human Trafficking: Critical Issues and Contexts (Routledge, 2015), pp. 169-180.
- J. Busza, S. Castle and A. Diarra, ‘Trafficking and Health’, British Medical Journal 328, 2004, 1369-1371.
- T. Brian and F. Laczko, ‘Migrant Deaths: An International Overview’, in T. Brian and F. Laczko (eds), Fatal Journeys: Trafficking Lost Lives During Migration (International Organisation for Migration, 2014), pp. 15-44.
- C. Horwood, ‘From Sub-Saharan Africa through North Africa: Tracking Deaths Along the Way’, in T. Brian and F. Laczko (eds), Fatal Journeys: Trafficking Lives Lost During Migration (International Organisation for Migration, 2014), pp. 109-137.
- B. Gushulak and D. MacPherson, ‘Health Issues Associated with Smuggling and Trafficking of Migrants’, Journal of Immigrant Health 2, 2000, 67-78.
- A. Farrell, J. McDevitt and S. Fahy, ‘Where are All the Victims?’, Criminology and Public Policy 9, 2, 2010, 201- 233.
- D. Brennan, ‘Key Issues in the Resettlement of Formerly Trafficked Persons in the US’, University of Pennsylvania Law Review158, 6 2010, 1581-1608.
- D. Hodge, ‘Assisting Victims of Human Trafficking: Strategies to Facilitate Identification, Exit from Trafficking and the Restoration of Wellness’, Social Work, 59, 2, 2014, pp. 1-8.
- D. Danna and P. Cavenaghi, ‘Transformative Mediation in Forced Marriage Cases’, Interdisciplinary Journal of Family Studies 17, 2, 2011, 45- 61.
Section 3. Crime and Law enforcement.
- L. Shelley, ‘Human Trafficking as Transnational Organised Crime’, in Human Trafficking: A Global Perspective (Cambridge University Press, 2010), pp. 85-111.
- MONEYVAL, Proceeds from Trafficking in Human Beings and Illegal Migration Human Smuggling’, Council of Europe, 2005, pp. 1-31.
- H.M. Government, ‘Report on the Review of Human Trafficking Legislation’, 2012.
- D. Wilson, W. Walsh and S. Kleuber, ‘Trafficking in Human Beings: Training and Services Among US Law Enforcement Agencies’, Police Practice and Research. 7, 2, 2006, 149- 161.
- A. Farrell, R. Pfeffer and K. Bright, ‘Police Perceptions of Human Trafficking’, Journal of Crime and Justice, 38, 3, 2015, 1-19.
- A. Farrell, C. Owens and J. McDevitt, ‘New Laws but Few Cases: Understanding the Challenges to the Investigation and Prosecution of Human Trafficking Cases’, Crime Law and Social Change 61, 2013, 139-168.
- A. Farrell and R. Pfeffer, ‘Policing Human Trafficking: Cultural Blinders and Organizational Barriers’, The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 653, 1, 2014, 46-64.
Section 4. Sexual Exploitation
- C. Watts and C. Zimmerman, ‘Violence Against Women: Global Scope and Magnitude’, The Lancet 359, 2002, 1232-1237.
- I. Yen, ‘Of Vice and Men: A New Approach to Eradicating Sex Trafficking by Reducing Male Demand through Educational Programs and Abolitionist Legislation’, Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 98, 2, 2008, 653- 686.
- R. Weitzer, ‘The Social Construction of Sex Trafficking: Ideology and Institutionalisation of the Moral Crusade’, Politics and Society 35, 3, 2007, 447-475.
- E. Kleemans and M. Smit, ‘Human Smuggling: Human Trafficking and Exploitation in the Sex Industry’, in L. Paoli (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Organised Crime (Oxford University Press, 2014), pp. 381- 401
- S.-Y. Cho, A. Dreher and E. Neumayer, ‘Does Legalised Prostitution Increase Human Trafficking?’, World Development 41, 2012, 67-82.
- N. Jakobsson and A. Kotsadam, ‘The Law and Economics of International Sex Slavery: Prostitution Laws and Trafficking for Sexual Exploitation’, (University of Gothenburg, Working Papers in Economics No. 458. 2013), pp. 1-29.
- A. Gill and S. Anitha, ‘The Illusion of Protection? An Analysis of Forced Marriage Legislation and Policy in the UK’, Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law. 31, 3, 2009, 257-269.
- Y. Samad, ‘Forced Marriage Among Men: An Unrecognised Problem’, Critical Social Policy 30, 2, 2010, 189- 207.
- K. Richards and S. Lyneham, ‘Bride Traffic: Trafficking for Marriage in Australia’, in M. Dragiewicz (ed), Global Human Trafficking: Critical Issues and Contexts (Routledge, 2015), pp. 105- 119.
Section 5. The Business and Economics of Forced Labour
- D. Frey and C. Fletcher, ‘Protocol to ILO Convention 29: A Step Forward to International Labour Standards’, Human Rights Brief (May 31st 2015).
- P. Belser, ‘Forced Labour and Human Trafficking: Estimating the Profits’, (Cornell University ILR School, 2005), pp. 1-22.
- S. Zhang, ‘Measuring Labor Trafficking: A Research Note’, Crime Law and Social Change 58, 2012, 469-482.
- L. Shelley, ‘The Business of Human Trafficking’, in Human Trafficking a Global Perspective (Cambridge University Press, 2010), pp. 112- 138.
- R. Plant, ‘Forced Labour, Slavery and Human Trafficking: When Do Definitions Matter?’, Anti-Trafficking Review 5, 2015, 153-157.
- K. Skrivankova, ‘Between Decent Work and Forced Labour: Examining the Continuum of Exploitation’, (The Joseph Rowntree Foundation, 2010), pp. 1-38.
- J. Allain, et al, ‘Forced Labour`s Business Models and Supply Chains’, (Joseph Rowntree Foundation, 2013).
- E. Wheaton et al, ‘Economics of Human Trafficking’, International Migration 48, 4, 2010, 114-141.
- N. Clark, ‘Detecting and Tackling Forced Labour in Europe’, (Joseph Rowntree Foundation, 2013).
- M. Lalani and H. Metcalf, ‘Forced Labour in the UK: The Business Angle’, (Joseph Rowntree Foundation, 2012).
Section 6. Children as Victims
- B. Willis and B. Levy, ‘Child Prostitution: Global Health Burden, Research Needs, and Interventions’, The Lancet 159, 2002, 1417-1422.
- E. Gozdziak, ‘Children Trafficked to the United States: Myths and Realities’, Global Dialogue 14, 2, 2012, 1-12.
- D. Smolin, ‘Intercountry Adoption as Child Trafficking’, Valparaiso University Law Review 39, 2, 2004, 281-325.
- J. Reid, J. Huard and R. Haskell, ‘Family-facilitated Juvenile Sex Trafficking’, Journal of Crime and Justice 38, 3, 2014, 1-16.
- F. Bokhari, ‘Falling Through the Gaps: Safeguarding Children Trafficked into the UK’, Children and Society 22, 2008, 201-211.
- J. Pearce, ‘Working with Trafficked Children and Young People: Complexities in Practice’, British Journal of Social Work 41, 2011, 1424-1441.
- ‘Child Trafficking for Forced Marriage: A Discussion Paper’, ECPAT, 2008, pp. 1-2.
- ‘Child Trafficking for Forced Criminality: A Discussion Paper’, ECPAT, 2010, pp. 1-2.
- ‘Female Genital Mutilation’, WHO Factsheet No. 241, 2014.
- ‘An Update on WHOs Work on Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) Progress Report’, WHO, 2011.
Section 7. Organ Harvesting
- N. Scheper-Hughes, ‘Human Trafficking in "Fresh" Organs for Illicit Transplants: A Protected Crime’, in M. Dragiewicz (ed.), Global Human Trafficking: Critical Issues and Contexts (Routledge. 2015), pp. 76-90.
- G. Danovitch, et al., ‘Organ Trafficking and Transplant Tourism: The Role of Global Professional Ethical Standards: The 2008 Declaration of Istanbul’, Transplantation 95, 2013, 1306-1312.
- F. Ambagtsheer, D. Zaitch and W. Weimer, ‘The Battle for Human Organs: Organ Trafficking and Transplant Tourism in a Global Context’, Global Crime14, 1, 2013, 1-26.
- J. Allain, ‘Trafficking in Persons for the Removal of Organs and the Admission of Guilt of a South African Hospital’, Medical Law Review 19, 2011, 117-122
- F. Ambagtsheer and W. Weimer, ‘A Criminological Perspective: Why Prohibition of Organ Trade is Not Effective and How the Declaration of Istanbul Can Move Forward’, American Journal of Transplantation 12, 2011, 671-675.
- J. Koplin, ‘Assessing the Likely Harms to Kidney Vendors in Regulated Organ Markets’, American Journal of Bioethics 14, 10, 2014, 7-18.
- A. Capron and F. Delmonico, ‘Preventing Trafficking in Organs for Transplantation: An Important Facet of the Fight Against Human Trafficking’, Journal of Human Trafficking 1, 2015, 56-64.
Section 8. Recent Trends and Developments
- L. Shelley, ‘Human Trafficking as a Form of Transnational Crime’, in M. Lee (ed), Human Trafficking (Willan Publishing, 2007).
- S. Lipscombe and J. Beard, ‘Human Trafficking: UK Responses’, House of Commons, 2014.
- C. Lyday, ‘The Shadow Market in Human Beings: An Anti-corruption Perspective’, paper given to the 10th International Anti-corruption Conference, 2001.
- E. Dugan, ‘Forced Labour and Human Trafficking: Media Coverage in 2012’, (Joseph Rowntree Foundation, 2013).
- M. Sobel, ‘Female Genital Cutting in the News Media: A Content Analysis’, The International Communication Gazette 77, 4, 2015, 384-405.
- M. Chibba, ‘Contemporary Issues on Human Trafficking, Migration and Exploitation’, Migration and Development 3, 2, 2014, 163-173
- F. E. Johns, ‘The Madness of Migration: Disquiet in the International Law Relating to Refugees’, International Journal of Law and Psychiatry 27, 2004, 587-607.
- K. Koser, ‘The Smuggling of Refugees’, in D. Kyle and R. Koslowski (eds), Global Human Smuggling (Johns Hopkins Press, 2011), pp. 256- 272.
- D. Kyle and J. Dale, ‘Smuggling the State Back In’, in D. Kyle and R. Koslowski (eds), Global Human Smuggling (Johns Hopkins Press, 2011), pp. 33- 59.
- B. Breuil, D. Seigal, P. van Reenan and L. Roos, ‘Human Trafficking Revisited: Legal Enforcement and Ethnographic Narratives on Sex Trafficking to Western Europe’,Trends in Organised Crime 14, 2011, 30-46.