Responding to Human Trafficking: Dispossession, Colonial Violence, and Resistance among Indigenous and Racialized Women

Responding to Human Trafficking is the first book to critically examine responses to the growing issue of human trafficking in Canada. Julie Kaye challenges the separation of trafficking debates into international versus domestic emphases and explores the tangled ways in which anti-trafficking policies reflect and reinforce the settler-colonial nation-building project of Canada. In doing so, Kaye reveals how some anti-trafficking measures create additional harms for the individuals they are trying to protect, particularly migrant and Indigenous women. The author’s critical examination draws upon theories of post- and settler-colonialism, Indigenous feminist thought, and fifty-six interviews with people in counter-trafficking employment across Western Canada.

Responding to Human Trafficking provides a new framework for critical analyses of anti-trafficking and other rights-based and anti-violence interventions. Kaye disrupts measures that contribute to the insecurity experienced by trafficked women and individuals affected by anti-trafficking responses by pointing to anti-colonial organizing and the possibilities of reciprocity in relationships of care.

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Responding to Human Trafficking: Dispossession, Colonial Violence, and Resistance among Indigenous and Racialized Women

Responding to Human Trafficking is the first book to critically examine responses to the growing issue of human trafficking in Canada. Julie Kaye challenges the separation of trafficking debates into international versus domestic emphases and explores the tangled ways in which anti-trafficking policies reflect and reinforce the settler-colonial nation-building project of Canada. In doing so, Kaye reveals how some anti-trafficking measures create additional harms for the individuals they are trying to protect, particularly migrant and Indigenous women. The author’s critical examination draws upon theories of post- and settler-colonialism, Indigenous feminist thought, and fifty-six interviews with people in counter-trafficking employment across Western Canada.

Responding to Human Trafficking provides a new framework for critical analyses of anti-trafficking and other rights-based and anti-violence interventions. Kaye disrupts measures that contribute to the insecurity experienced by trafficked women and individuals affected by anti-trafficking responses by pointing to anti-colonial organizing and the possibilities of reciprocity in relationships of care.

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Responding to Human Trafficking: Dispossession, Colonial Violence, and Resistance among Indigenous and Racialized Women

Responding to Human Trafficking: Dispossession, Colonial Violence, and Resistance among Indigenous and Racialized Women

by Hiawata!
Responding to Human Trafficking: Dispossession, Colonial Violence, and Resistance among Indigenous and Racialized Women

Responding to Human Trafficking: Dispossession, Colonial Violence, and Resistance among Indigenous and Racialized Women

by Hiawata!

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Overview

Responding to Human Trafficking is the first book to critically examine responses to the growing issue of human trafficking in Canada. Julie Kaye challenges the separation of trafficking debates into international versus domestic emphases and explores the tangled ways in which anti-trafficking policies reflect and reinforce the settler-colonial nation-building project of Canada. In doing so, Kaye reveals how some anti-trafficking measures create additional harms for the individuals they are trying to protect, particularly migrant and Indigenous women. The author’s critical examination draws upon theories of post- and settler-colonialism, Indigenous feminist thought, and fifty-six interviews with people in counter-trafficking employment across Western Canada.

Responding to Human Trafficking provides a new framework for critical analyses of anti-trafficking and other rights-based and anti-violence interventions. Kaye disrupts measures that contribute to the insecurity experienced by trafficked women and individuals affected by anti-trafficking responses by pointing to anti-colonial organizing and the possibilities of reciprocity in relationships of care.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781487521615
Publisher: University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division
Publication date: 08/27/2017
Pages: 180
Product dimensions: 6.03(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.73(d)

About the Author

Julie Kaye is an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Saskatchewan.

Table of Contents

List of Figures

List of Acronyms

Preface and Acknowledgments

Introduction

Chapter 1: The Production of International and Domestic Anti-Trafficking in Settler-Colonial Canada

Chapter 2: Settler-Colonialism and the Construction of Anti-trafficking

Chapter 3: Anti-Trafficking in Canada: Negotiating “Domestic” versus “International”

Chapter 4: Settler Colonialism, Sex Work, Criminalization, and Human Trafficking

Chapter 5: Anti-Trafficking and Border Secularization

Conclusion: Anti-Trafficking Policy and Human Insecurity

Appendix A

Appendix B

References

Notes

What People are Saying About This

Julietta Hua

"Responding to Human Trafficking is an innovative and unique contribution to the growing field of critical studies of anti-trafficking. Centering the settler-colonial project of Canada, the book engages in an honest and earnest analysis of the ways trafficking cannot be untangled from the ongoing colonial occupation of indigenous nations. No one to date has offered such a contribution in trafficking studies, and this makes Julie Kaye’s work a ground-breaking addition to the field."

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