Policing Victimhood: Human Trafficking, Frontline Work, and the Carceral State
English
By (author): Corinne Schwarz
Since the turn of the twentieth century, human trafficking has animated public discourses, policy debates, and moral panics in the United States. Though some nuances of these conversations have shifted, the role of the criminal legal system (police officers, investigators, lawyers, and connected service providers) in anti-trafficking interventions has remained firmly in place. Policing Victimhood explores how frontline workers in direct contact with vulnerable, exploited, and trafficked personshowever those groups are defined at personal, organizational, or legal levelsdefer to the tools of the carceral state and ideologies of punishment when navigating their clients needs.
In Policing Victimhood, Corinne Schwarz interviewed with service providers in the Midwestern US, a region that, though colloquially understood as flyover country, regularly positions itself as a leader in state-level anti-trafficking policies and collaborative networks. These frontline workers perceptions and narratives are informed by their interpersonal, day-to-day encounters with exploited or trafficked persons. Their insights underscore how anti-trafficking policies are put into practice and influenced by specific ideologies and stereotypes. Extending the reach of street-level bureaucracy theory to anti-trafficking initiatives, Schwarz demonstrates how frontline workers are uniquely positioned to perpetuate or radically counter punitive anti-trafficking efforts.
Taking a cue from anti-carceral feminist critiques and critical trafficking studies, Schwarz argues that ongoing anti-trafficking efforts in the US expand the punitive arm of the state without addressing the role of systemic oppression in perpetuating violence. The violence inherent to the carceral stateand required for its continued expansionis the same violence that perpetuates the exploitation of human trafficking. In order to solve the problem of human trafficking, advocates, activists, and scholars must divest from systems that center punishment and radically reinvest their efforts in dismantling the structural violence that perpetuates social exclusion and vulnerability, what she calls the -isms and -phobias that harm some at the expense of others empowerment. Policing Victimhood encourages readers to imagine a world without carceral violence in any of its forms.
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In Policing Victimhood, Corinne Schwarz interviewed with service providers in the Midwestern US, a region that, though colloquially understood as flyover country, regularly positions itself as a leader in state-level anti-trafficking policies and collaborative networks. These frontline workers perceptions and narratives are informed by their interpersonal, day-to-day encounters with exploited or trafficked persons. Their insights underscore how anti-trafficking policies are put into practice and influenced by specific ideologies and stereotypes. Extending the reach of street-level bureaucracy theory to anti-trafficking initiatives, Schwarz demonstrates how frontline workers are uniquely positioned to perpetuate or radically counter punitive anti-trafficking efforts.
Taking a cue from anti-carceral feminist critiques and critical trafficking studies, Schwarz argues that ongoing anti-trafficking efforts in the US expand the punitive arm of the state without addressing the role of systemic oppression in perpetuating violence. The violence inherent to the carceral stateand required for its continued expansionis the same violence that perpetuates the exploitation of human trafficking. In order to solve the problem of human trafficking, advocates, activists, and scholars must divest from systems that center punishment and radically reinvest their efforts in dismantling the structural violence that perpetuates social exclusion and vulnerability, what she calls the -isms and -phobias that harm some at the expense of others empowerment. Policing Victimhood encourages readers to imagine a world without carceral violence in any of its forms.
See more
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