Constraints to a Robust Evidence Base for Anti-Trafficking Interventions
Over fifteen years after the UN Trafficking Protocol was adopted, the evidence available to determine how much progress has been made in combatting human trafficking remains very limited. This paper provides a practitioner’s perspective on some of the main reasons for the continuing lack of meaningf...
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Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women
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doaj-0e207fa7ad044859a9edb4c99d874ea02020-11-24T21:49:57ZengGlobal Alliance Against Traffic in WomenAnti-Trafficking Review2286-75112287-01132017-04-01810.14197/atr.20121787229Constraints to a Robust Evidence Base for Anti-Trafficking InterventionsBenjamin HarkinsOver fifteen years after the UN Trafficking Protocol was adopted, the evidence available to determine how much progress has been made in combatting human trafficking remains very limited. This paper provides a practitioner’s perspective on some of the main reasons for the continuing lack of meaningful results documented in the context of anti-trafficking projects. A key finding is that limitations in the practice of monitoring and evaluation (M&E) pose the greatest constraint rather than the clandestine nature of trafficking in persons. There are currently few incentives to be rigorous in pursuing evidence, especially of the contribution made to long-term reductions in human trafficking. Bean counting the direct outputs of activities rather than assessing the outcomes that are intended to flow from them remains the core approach to M&E in the sector. Because the collection and analysis of data has not been prioritised, anti-trafficking initiatives without a strong empirical basis are reflexively continued for years–particularly notable in some of the untested assumptions about the central importance of an effective criminal justice response. Increased commitment by donors and practitioners to raise their standards of evidence for anti-trafficking projects is necessary to move beyond basic accountability and start leveraging learning, including greater willingness to document in rich detail where interventions have failed to produce their intended outcomes.http://www.antitraffickingreview.org/index.php/atrjournal/article/view/229human traffickingforced labouranti-traffickingmonitoring and evaluationimpact assessmentresultsevidence |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Benjamin Harkins |
spellingShingle |
Benjamin Harkins Constraints to a Robust Evidence Base for Anti-Trafficking Interventions Anti-Trafficking Review human trafficking forced labour anti-trafficking monitoring and evaluation impact assessment results evidence |
author_facet |
Benjamin Harkins |
author_sort |
Benjamin Harkins |
title |
Constraints to a Robust Evidence Base for Anti-Trafficking Interventions |
title_short |
Constraints to a Robust Evidence Base for Anti-Trafficking Interventions |
title_full |
Constraints to a Robust Evidence Base for Anti-Trafficking Interventions |
title_fullStr |
Constraints to a Robust Evidence Base for Anti-Trafficking Interventions |
title_full_unstemmed |
Constraints to a Robust Evidence Base for Anti-Trafficking Interventions |
title_sort |
constraints to a robust evidence base for anti-trafficking interventions |
publisher |
Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women |
series |
Anti-Trafficking Review |
issn |
2286-7511 2287-0113 |
publishDate |
2017-04-01 |
description |
Over fifteen years after the UN Trafficking Protocol was adopted, the evidence available to determine how much progress has been made in combatting human trafficking remains very limited. This paper provides a practitioner’s perspective on some of the main reasons for the continuing lack of meaningful results documented in the context of anti-trafficking projects. A key finding is that limitations in the practice of monitoring and evaluation (M&E) pose the greatest constraint rather than the clandestine nature of trafficking in persons. There are currently few incentives to be rigorous in pursuing evidence, especially of the contribution made to long-term reductions in human trafficking. Bean counting the direct outputs of activities rather than assessing the outcomes that are intended to flow from them remains the core approach to M&E in the sector. Because the collection and analysis of data has not been prioritised, anti-trafficking initiatives without a strong empirical basis are reflexively continued for years–particularly notable in some of the untested assumptions about the central importance of an effective criminal justice response. Increased commitment by donors and practitioners to raise their standards of evidence for anti-trafficking projects is necessary to move beyond basic accountability and start leveraging learning, including greater willingness to document in rich detail where interventions have failed to produce their intended outcomes. |
topic |
human trafficking forced labour anti-trafficking monitoring and evaluation impact assessment results evidence |
url |
http://www.antitraffickingreview.org/index.php/atrjournal/article/view/229 |
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