Good Shepherd Social Justice Network

For details of trafficking-related publications by region, you may find the following paper useful:

Farquet, R., Mattila, H. & Laczko, F. 2005. Human trafficking: bibliography by region. International Migration; 43(1/2): 301-42.
 

 



JOURNAL ARTICLES

 

  • Aghatise, E. 2004. Trafficking for prostitution in Italy. Possible effects of government proposals for legalization of brothels. Violence Against Women; 10(10): 1126-1155.
  • Agustin, L. 2005. Migrants in the mistress's house: other voices in the "trafficking" debate. Social Politics; 12(1): 96-117.
  • Andrees, B. & van der Linden, M.N.J. 2005. Designing trafficking research from a labour market perspective: the ILO experience. International Migration; 43(1/2): 55-73.
  • Arowolo, O.O. 2000. Return migration and the problem of reintegration. International Migration; 38(5): 59-81.
  • Beyrer, C. 2004. Is trafficking a health issue? The Lancet; 363(9408): 564.
  • Beyrer, C. 2004. Global child trafficking. The Lancet; 364 (Supplement 1): 16-7.
  • Beyrer, C. & Stachowlak, J. 2003. Health consequences of trafficking in women and girls in Southeast Asia. The Brown Journal of World Affairs; X(1): 105-17.
  • Brennan, D. 2005. Methodological challenges in research with trafficked persons: tales from the field. International Migration; 43(1/2): 35-54.
  • Bruch, E.M. 2004. Models wanted: the search for an effective response to human trafficking. Stanford Journal of International Law; 40(1): 1-45.
  • Bump, M., Duncan, J., Gozdziak, E. & MacDonnell, M. 2005. Second conference on identifying and serving child victims of trafficking. International Migration; 43(1/2): 343-63.
  • Burn, J., Blay, S. & Simmon, F. 2005. Combating human trafficking: Australia's responses to to modern day slavery. Australian Law Journal; 79(9): 543-552.

Burn, J. & Simmons, F. 2005. Rewarding witnesses, ignoring victims: an evaluation of the new trafficking visa framework. Immigration Review; 24: 6-13.

Busza, J., Castle, S. & Diarra, A. 2004. Trafficking and health. BMJ; 328: 1369-71.

Caraway, N. 2006. Human trafficking and existing contradictions in Asia-Pacific human politics and discourse. Tulane Journal of International and Comparative Law; 14(2): 295-316.

Carrington, C., and Hearn, J. 2003.  Trafficking and the Sex Industry: From Impunity to Protection. Current Issues Brief, 28: pp 1-16.

Chacon, J.M. 2006. Misery and myopia: understanding the failures of US efforts to stop human trafficking. Fordham Law Review; 74(6): 2977-3040.

Curtol, F., Decarli, S., Di Nicola, A. & Savona, E.U. 2004. Victims of human trafficking in Italy: a judicial perspective. International Review of Victimology; 11(1): 111-141.

Cwikel, J. & Hoban, E. 2005. Contentious issues in research on trafficked women working in the sex industry: study design, ethics, and methodology. Journal of Sex Research; 42(4): 306-16.

Davidson, J. O'Connell. 2003. 'Sleeping with the enemy?' Some problems with feminist abolitionist calls to penalise those why buy commercial sex. Social Policy and Society; 2(1): 55-64.

Dill, S.E. 2006. Old crimes in new times: human trafficking and the modern justice system. Criminal Justice; 21(1): 12-18.

Engstrom, D.W., Minas, S.A., Espinoza, M. & Jones, L. 2004. Halting the trafficking of women and children in Thailand for the sex trade: progress and challenges. Journal of Social Work Research and Evaluation; 5(2): 193-206.

Fergus, L. 2005. Trafficking in women for sexual exploitation. Human Rights Defender; 14(3): 11-13.

Gallagher, A. 2001. Human rights and the new UN protocols on trafficking and migrant smuggling: a preliminary analysis. Human Rights Quarterly; 23: 975-1004.

Gozdziak, E.M. & Collett, E.A. 2005. Research on human trafficking in North America: a review of the literature. International Migration; 43 (1/2): 99-128.

Gushulak, B.D. & MacPherson, D.W. 2000. Health issues associated with the smuggling and trafficking of migrants. Journal of Immigrant Health; 2(2): 67-78.

Haynes, D.F. 2004. Used, abused, arrested and deported: extending immigration benefits to protect victims of trafficking and to secure the prosecution of traffickers. Human Rights Quarterly; 26(2): 221-272.

Hyland, K.E. 2001. Protecting huma victims of trafficking: and American framework. Berkeley Women's Law Journal; 16: 29-71.

Jeffries, S. 2002. Women trafficking and the Australian connection. Arena Magazine; 58: 44-7.

Laczko, F. 2005. Data and research on human trafficking. International Migration; 43(1/2): 5-16.

Lee, J.J.H. 2005. Human trafficking in East Asia: current trends, data collection, and knowledge gaps. International Migration; 43(1-2): 165-201.

Leuchtag, A. 2003. Human rights, sex trafficking and prostitution. The Humanist; 10-3.

Lim, L.L. & Oishi, N. 1996. International labour migration of Asian women: distinctive characteristics and policy concerns. Asian an Pacific Migration Journal; 5(1): 85-116.

Loff, B. & Sanghera, J. 2004. Distortions and difficulties in data for trafficking. The Lancet; 363(9408): 566.

Long, D.D. 2004. Anthropological perspectives on the trafficking of women for sexual exploitation. International Migration; 42(1): 5-31.

Marshall, P. 2005.Raising our own awareness: getting to grips with trafficking in persons and related problems in South-East Asia and beyond. . Asia-Pacific Population Journal; 20(3): 143-63.

Molland, S. 2005. Human trafficking and poverty reduction: two sides of the same coin? Juth Pakai; 4: 27-37.

(Discusses the relationship between migration, poverty and trafficking with particular reference to the  National Growth and Poverty Eradication Strategy (NGPES )

Munro, V.E. 2005. A tale of two servitudes: defining and implementing a domestic response to trafficking of women for prostitution in the UK and Australia. Social & Legal Studies; 14(1): 91-114.

Murphy, E. & Ringheim, K. 2005. An interview with Jo Doezema, of the Network of Sex Work Projects: Does attention to trafficking adversely affect sex workers' rights? Reproductive Health Matters: 13-15.

Obokata, T. 2003. Human trafficking, human rights and the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002. European Human Rights Law Review; 4: 410-422.

Olesen, H. 2002. Migration, return, and development: an institutional perspective. International Migration; 40(5): 125-150.

Piper, N. 2003. Bridging gender, migration and governance: theoretical possibilities in the Asian context. Asian and Pacific Migration Journal; 12(1-2): 21-48.

Piper, N. 2004. Rights of foreign workers and the politics of migration in South-East and East Asia. International Migration; 42(5): 71-97.

Piper, N. 2005. A problem by a different name? A review of research on trafficking in South-East Asia and Oceania. International Migration; 43(1/2): 203-33.

Poudel, P. & Carryer, J. 2000. Girl-trafficking, HIV/AIDS, and the position of women in Nepal. Gender and Development; 8(2): 74-9.

Poulin, R. 2003. Globalisation and the sex trade: trafficking and the commodification of women and children. Canadian Women Studies; 22: 38-43.

Richards, K. 2004. The trafficking of migrant workers: what are the links between labour trafficking and corruption? International Migration; 42(5): 147-68.

Sadruddin, H., Walter, N. & Hidalgo, J. 2005. Human trafficking in the United States: expanding victim protection beyond prosecution witnesses. Stanford Law & Policy Review; 16(2): 379-416.

Schloenhardt, A. 2001. Trafficking in migrants: illegal migration and organized crime in Australia and the Asia Pacific region. International Journal of the Sociology of Law; 29(4): 331-378.

Seagrave, M. 2004. Surely something is better than nothing? The Australian response to the trafficking of women into sexual servitude in Australia. Current Issues in Criminal Justice; 16: 85-92.

Seagrave, M. & Milivojevic, S. 2005. Sex trafficking - a new agenda. Social Alternatives; 24(2): 11-16.

Simm, G. 2004. Negotiating the United Nations Trafficking Protocol: feminist debates. Australian Yearbook of International Law; 23: 135-160.

Skeldon, R. 2000. Trafficking: a perspective from Asia. International Migration; Special Issue 1: 8-30.

Stolz, B. 2005. Educating the policymakers and setting the criminal justice policymaking agenda: interest groups and the 'Victims of Trafficking and Violence Act of 2000'. Criminal Justice: The International Journal of Policy and Practice; 5(4): 407-430.

Tailby, R. 2001. Organised crime and people smuggling / trafficking to Australia. Trends & Issues in Crime & Justice; No. 208.

(This paper discusses recent changes in Australian

law relating to people smuggling and trafficking, reviews the evidence on those responsible, and evaluates the involvement of organisedcrime in these activities.)

Taylor, L.R. 2005. Dangerous trade-offs: the behavioural ecology of child labour and prostitution in rural Northern Thailand. Current Anthropology; 46(3): 411-432.

Tomasi, L.F. 2000. Globalisation and human trafficking. Migration World Magazine; 4.

Trepanier, M. 2003. Trafficking in women for purposes of sexual exploitation: a matter of consent? Canadian Woman Studies; 22: 48-54.

Tyldum, G. & Brunovskis, A. 2005. Describing the unobserved: metodlogical challenges in empirical studies on human trafficking. International Migration; 43(1/2): 17-34.

Webber, A. & Shirk, D. 2005. Hidden victims: evaluating protections for undocumented victims of human trafficking. Immigration Policy In Focus; 4(8): 1-10.

(Discusses the difficulties with legislation for undocumented persons in the U.S.)

Zavratnik Zimic, S. & Pajnik, M. 2005. Trafficking in women: a victim's perspective. Teorija in Praksa; 42(1): 113-135.

Zierer Brigitta, 2007 SW$S News magazine. Comparative Social Work and Trafficking in Women. The need for Social workers to have intercultural competence, especially when in contact with trafficked women.


   
 
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