Dialectical Anthropology
Volume 37, Issue 2, 2013, Pages 257-276

Domestic minor sex trafficking and the detention-to-protection pipeline (Article) (Open Access)

Musto J.*
  • a External Faculty Fellow, Humanities Research Center (HRC), Human Trafficking Seminar, Rice University, Rayzor Hall 6100 Main Street MS 620, Houston, TX, 77005, United States

Abstract

Notable discursive changes are afoot with respect to individuals, particularly sex trade-involved youth in the United States. Where once they may have been profiled as juvenile offenders, they are now, thanks to widespread attention to human trafficking, provisionally viewed by law enforcement and their non-state allies as potential victims of domestic minor sex trafficking, replete with traumatic pasts and turbulent family histories that authorize state intervention. This article examines how anti-trafficking policies have been discursively re-imagined to expand policing and rehabilitative interventions for youth. Drawing on in-depth interviews and ethnographic observations, it tracks the discursive sites and spaces in which criminal justice and social justice agendas have coalesced to assist youth and further assesses how attention to domestic minor sex trafficking has simultaneously authorized a multiprofessional detention-to-protection pipeline. © 2013 The Author(s).

Author Keywords

Sex work Juvenile justice Policing Criminal justice Carceral studies Prison abolition Critical criminology Domestic minor sex trafficking Anti-trafficking rescue industry Critical trafficking studies Prostitution

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84879780689&doi=10.1007%2fs10624-013-9295-0&partnerID=40&md5=0e5f38822bcc497082af2148027d1b79

DOI: 10.1007/s10624-013-9295-0
ISSN: 03044092
Cited by: 24
Original Language: English