ABSTRACT

By analysing the complex issues surrounding internal and cross-border human trafficking in Asia, and asserting critical perspectives and methodologies, this book extends the range of sites for discussion and sectors in which human trafficking takes place.

The book re-centres human trafficking as an area of legitimate academic inquiry in a region that is often considered as an epicentre for human trafficking: East and Southeast Asia. It thus offers an in-depth analysis and up-to-date knowledge on research methodologies and engagements, patterns and forms of human trafficking, constructively critiquing anti-trafficking campaigns and discourses, and offering examples of good practice within the region that help us move beyond the impasse that currently hampers human trafficking as a field of inquiry in the social sciences.

Providing constructive avenues for human trafficking research to proceed methodologically, theoretically and ethically, this book is of interest to students and scholars of Politics, International Relations and Southeast Asian Studies.

part |16 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction

Forcing issues

part I|62 pages

Anti-trafficking reconsidered

chapter 2|16 pages

The good, the bad and the ugly

In the name of victim protection

chapter 3|14 pages

Trafficking versus smuggling

Malaysia's Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act 1

chapter 4|15 pages

Victims of human trafficking or perpetrators of fraudulent marriage?

Foreign spouses engaging in the sex industry in Taiwan

chapter 5|15 pages

Globalising rehabilitative regimes

Framing the moral economy of vocational training in after-trafficking work

part II|59 pages

Methodological issues in researching human trafficking

chapter 6|20 pages

Virgin territory re-explored

Ethnographic insight, public policy and the trade in minority women in Southeast Asia 1

chapter 7|17 pages

In search of the perfect method

Reflections on knowing, seeing, measuring and estimating human trafficking

chapter 8|20 pages

Another side of the story

Challenges in research with unidentified and unassisted trafficking victims

part III|43 pages

Complicating human trafficking

chapter 9|24 pages

Trafficking at sea

The situation of enslaved fishermen in Southeast Asia

chapter 10|17 pages

People smuggling in Indonesia

Dependency, exploitation and other vulnerabilities 1

part IV|47 pages

Moving forward

chapter 13|14 pages

Balancing relations, broadening discourses?

Shifting the terrain of local nongovernment organisation involvement in anti-trafficking knowledge production in Vietnam