Critical Sociology
Volume 43, Issue 1, 2017, Pages 91-111

‘Traffickers and Their Victims’: Anti-Trafficking Policy in the United Kingdom (Article)

Sharapov K.*
  • a University of Bedfordshire, United Kingdom, Central European University, Hungary

Abstract

This paper relies upon the ‘what’s the problem represented to be?’ approach to policy analysis to interrogate key representations of human trafficking implicit in the UK government’s anti-trafficking policy. It identifies six policy vectors, or representations, of human trafficking embedded within the policy, including organized crime, ‘illegal’ immigration, and victim assistance as three primary vectors; sexual exploitation/prostitution, poverty in countries of victims’ origin, and isolated instances of labour law infringements as three secondary vectors. In addition, a series of assumptions, which underlie the current interpretation of trafficking, are also identified. By exploring what the problem of human trafficking is represented to be, the paper also provides an insight into what remains obscured within the context of the dominant policy frameworks. In doing so, it highlights the role of state-capital entanglements in normalizing exploitation of trafficked, smuggled and ‘offshored’ labour, and critiques the UK’s anti-trafficking policy for manufacturing doubt as to the structural causes of human trafficking within the context of neoliberalism. © 2015, © The Author(s) 2015.

Author Keywords

Political economy biopolitics Government policy Trafficking in human beings Neoliberalism Exploitation ignorance

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85008703729&doi=10.1177%2f0896920515598562&partnerID=40&md5=eae0684373a8ea164b32dbe420832d6f

DOI: 10.1177/0896920515598562
ISSN: 08969205
Cited by: 6
Original Language: English