Sex Trafficking in South Asia

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A01=Mary Crawford
Author_Mary Crawford
Border Interception
brothel
Brothel Owners
Brothel Raids
caste and social hierarchy
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Category=GTP
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Category=JP
Commercialized Sexual Transactions
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Everest Base Camp
feminist theory
gender power dynamics
girls
High Caste Women
home
Human Rights Approach
human rights violations
Humanitarian Aid
indian
Indian Brothel
intersectionality in trafficking discourse
King Birendra
Low Caste Women
maiti
Maiti Nepal
nepal
Nepal India Border
nepali
Nepali Girls
Nepali Women
NGO Employee
NGO Report
NGO Worker
qualitative case study
Sex Work
Sinai Desert
South Asian studies
Term Sex Work
transit
Transit Home
UN
Village Mobilizers
women
work
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415500074
  • Weight: 380g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Sep 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book is a critical feminist analysis of sex trafficking. Arguing that trafficking in girls and women is a product of the social construction of gender and other dimensions of power and status within a particular culture and at a particular historical moment, this book offers the necessary locally grounded analysis.

Focusing on the case of Nepal, from where 5,000 to 7,000 thousands of Nepali girls and women are trafficked each year primarily to India, Mary Crawford assesses how the social construction of trafficking - the concept and its representation in discourse - are influenced by the dynamics of gender, caste, and the development establishment. The defining figure is an innocent, naïve young girl being lured or duped into leaving the safety of her village. The trafficking victim is portrayed as "backward"; however, she is "backward" in specific ways that resonate with Nepal’s struggle to resist and yet encompass Western influence. This view may lead to paradoxical effects in which efforts to protect girls and women instead restrict their human rights. Rather than seeing women as universalized victims, Crawford assesses how the social construction of trafficking in a particular society affects girls and women who live in that society.

In this book, the author’s voice as a woman, a feminist, and a social scientist immersed in a "foreign" way of life, illuminates aspects of this process and highlights the subjectivity of urban women. It makes the connection between Nepali subjectivities and a problem of international significance, the trafficking of girls and women. The book provides a model for other locally grounded accounts of sex trafficking to counter the universalizing rhetoric of the mass media and some anti-trafficking activists, filling a niche in South Asian Studies and Women’s Studies.

Mary Crawford is Professor of Psychology and Women’s Studies at the University of Connecticut. She is the author of more than 50 research articles and ten books including Talking Difference, Innovative Methods for Feminist Psychological Research, and Transformations: Women, Gender, and Psychology.

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