Consuming Life after Anti-Trafficking

The rise of transnational, market-based anti-trafficking organisations has expanded the anti-trafficking domain to include Western corporations and consumers. In an effort to improve living conditions for survivors of trafficking, these organisations sell commodities produced by former victims or wo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sofie Henriksen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women 2018-04-01
Series:Anti-Trafficking Review
Online Access:http://www.antitraffickingreview.org/index.php/atrjournal/article/view/319
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spelling doaj-826e7152eba948ff918fdaf72329fa9f2020-11-24T22:29:49ZengGlobal Alliance Against Traffic in WomenAnti-Trafficking Review2286-75112287-01132018-04-011010.14197/atr.201218102319Consuming Life after Anti-TraffickingSofie HenriksenThe rise of transnational, market-based anti-trafficking organisations has expanded the anti-trafficking domain to include Western corporations and consumers. In an effort to improve living conditions for survivors of trafficking, these organisations sell commodities produced by former victims or women at risk of human trafficking and brand them as symbols of a new and better life after anti-trafficking. Thus, life after anti-trafficking is not isolated to the locations of the trafficking victims, but occurs in distant areas and among diverse groups of people. This article investigates how representations of life after anti-trafficking engage consumers, corporations and NGO workers in New York City through the sale and purchase of ‘slave-free’ products made by Southeast Asian women deemed ‘survivors of trafficking’. The ethnographic data illustrates how life after anti-trafficking unfolds in the context of US corporate and consumer culture and intersects with capitalist discourses of freedom, consumer ethics and politics of market-based aid. Consequently, life after anti-trafficking creates new consumer identities, anti-trafficking aid strategies and business opportunities detached from the actual victims of human trafficking.http://www.antitraffickingreview.org/index.php/atrjournal/article/view/319
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sofie Henriksen
spellingShingle Sofie Henriksen
Consuming Life after Anti-Trafficking
Anti-Trafficking Review
author_facet Sofie Henriksen
author_sort Sofie Henriksen
title Consuming Life after Anti-Trafficking
title_short Consuming Life after Anti-Trafficking
title_full Consuming Life after Anti-Trafficking
title_fullStr Consuming Life after Anti-Trafficking
title_full_unstemmed Consuming Life after Anti-Trafficking
title_sort consuming life after anti-trafficking
publisher Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women
series Anti-Trafficking Review
issn 2286-7511
2287-0113
publishDate 2018-04-01
description The rise of transnational, market-based anti-trafficking organisations has expanded the anti-trafficking domain to include Western corporations and consumers. In an effort to improve living conditions for survivors of trafficking, these organisations sell commodities produced by former victims or women at risk of human trafficking and brand them as symbols of a new and better life after anti-trafficking. Thus, life after anti-trafficking is not isolated to the locations of the trafficking victims, but occurs in distant areas and among diverse groups of people. This article investigates how representations of life after anti-trafficking engage consumers, corporations and NGO workers in New York City through the sale and purchase of ‘slave-free’ products made by Southeast Asian women deemed ‘survivors of trafficking’. The ethnographic data illustrates how life after anti-trafficking unfolds in the context of US corporate and consumer culture and intersects with capitalist discourses of freedom, consumer ethics and politics of market-based aid. Consequently, life after anti-trafficking creates new consumer identities, anti-trafficking aid strategies and business opportunities detached from the actual victims of human trafficking.
url http://www.antitraffickingreview.org/index.php/atrjournal/article/view/319
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