Since the signing of the UN Trafficking Protocol,
anti-trafficking laws, policies and other initiatives have been
implemented at the local, national and regional levels. These
activities have received little scholarly attention. This volume
aims to begin to fill this gap by documenting the micro-processes
through which an anti-trafficking framework has been translated,
implemented and resisted in mainland and island Southeast Asia. The
detailed ethnographic accounts in this collection examine the
everyday practices of the diverse range of actors involved in
trafficking-like practices and in anti-trafficking initiatives. In
demonstrating how the anti-trafficking framework has become
influential and even over-determining in some border sites and yet
remains mostly irrelevant in others, the chapters in this
collection explore the complex connections between labour
migration, migrant smuggling and human trafficking.
General
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