Social Inclusion
Volume 3, Issue 1, 2015, Pages 2-21

Modeling for determinants of human trafficking: An empirical analysis (Article) (Open Access)

Cho S.-Y.*
  • a Philipps-University of Marburg, Barfüßertor 2, Marburg, 35037, Germany

Abstract

This study aims to identify robust push and pull factors of human trafficking. I test for the robustness of 70 push and 63 pull factors suggested in the literature. In doing so, I employ an extreme bound analysis, running more than two million regressions with all possible combinations of variables for up to 153 countries during the period of 1995-2010. My results show that crime prevalence robustly explains human trafficking both in destination and origin countries. Income level also has a robust impact, suggesting that the cause of human trafficking shares that of economic migration. Law enforcement matters more in origin countries than destination countries. Interestingly, a very low level of gender equality may have constraining effects on human trafficking outflow, possibly because gender discrimination limits female mobility that is necessary for the occurrence of human trafficking. © 2015 by the author; licensee Cogitatio (Lisbon, Portugal).

Author Keywords

Human trafficking Extreme bound analysis Robustness Push and pull factors

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84940448112&doi=10.17645%2fsi.v3i1.125&partnerID=40&md5=c35d239eeebd8186873cd79df77108e0

DOI: 10.17645/si.v3i1.125
ISSN: 21832803
Cited by: 24
Original Language: English