Forced Victims or Willing Migrants? Contesting Assumptions About Child Trafficking

dc.contributor.authorGoździak, E. M.
dc.date.accessioned2016-12-13T17:08:10Z
dc.date.available2016-12-13T17:08:10Z
dc.date.issued2016
dc.description.abstractHuman trafficking continues to capture the imagination of the global public. Gut wrenching narratives about children sold into domestic servitude appear on front pages of major international newspapers, in academic journals, and books sold in university and commercial bookstores. Public discourse emphasizes the particular vulnerability of trafficked children, related to bio-physiological, social, behavioural, and cognitive phases of the maturation process and underscores the necessity to act in the children’s best interest. Trafficked children are nearly always portrayed as hapless victims forced into the trafficking situation and hardly ever as actors with a great deal of volition participating in the decision to migrate. In this chapter, I contest some of the prevailing assumptions about trafficked children and adolescents , especially issues of volition and agency, vulnerability and resiliency, victimhood and survivorship. I contest some of the myths “woven from solid data, conjecture, cultural assumptions, and organizational and political agendas” (Frederick in The wretched of the earth (Richard Philcox, Trans.) (Reprint ed.). New York: Grove Press 2005, 127–128) about the forced nature of the trafficking process and juxtapose them with the experiences as narrated by the survivors of child trafficking. I contrast the image of “the forcibly trafficked child” whose childhood had been lost and needed to be reclaimed with the diversity of experiences and voices that need to be heard in order to facilitate long-term economic and social self-sufficiency of survivors of child trafficking. In the film Taken, Liam Neeson plays a retired government agent whose daughter Amanda, on vacation in Paris, is captured by two mobsters running a slavery-prostitution ring. What follows—predictably—is a frantic father on a transatlantic quest to rescue his daughter. In reality, trafficking scenarios do not follow Hollywood scripts. Trafficked children are rarely taken by force. Parents of “trafficked” children do not have to search for them because they know exactly where they have taken their children or whom they have paid to smuggle their children across international borders. In this chapter, I contest some of the prevailing assumptions about trafficked children and adolescents, especially issues of volition and agency, vulnerability and resiliency, victimhood and survivorship. I contest some of the myths “woven from solid data, conjecture, cultural assumptions, and organizational and political agendas” (Frederick 2005, 127–128) about the forced nature of the trafficking process and juxtapose them with the realities, as expressed by the survivors of child trafficking. I contrast the image of “the forcibly trafficked child” whose childhood has been lost and needs to be reclaimed with the diversity of experiences and voices of children and adolescents trafficked into the United States. These voices need to be heard in order to facilitate the long-term economic and social self-sufficiency of survivors of child trafficking. (Author Abstract)en_US
dc.identifier.citationGoździak, E. M. (2016). Forced Victims or Willing Migrants? Contesting Assumptions About Child Trafficking. In Contested Childhoods: Growing up in Migrancy (pp. 23-41). Springer International Publishing.en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2F978-3-319-44610-3_1.pdf
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11212/3106
dc.language.isoen_USen_US
dc.publisherSpringer International Publishingen_US
dc.subjecttraffickingen_US
dc.subjectchild abuseen_US
dc.subjectdefinitionsen_US
dc.subjectvoluntaryen_US
dc.subjectparentingen_US
dc.subjectpolicyen_US
dc.titleForced Victims or Willing Migrants? Contesting Assumptions About Child Traffickingen_US
dc.typeBook chapteren_US

Files