‘Shock and Awe’: A critique of the Ghana-centric child trafficking discourse

This paper is a critique of the dominant anti-trafficking discourse and activism in Ghana. It argues that the discourse grossly underplays the role of external forces in shaping the conditions underpinning children’s labour mobility in the past and the hardships underpinning the phenomenon today. In...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Samuel Okyere
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women 2017-09-01
Series:Anti-Trafficking Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.antitraffickingreview.org/index.php/atrjournal/article/view/266
id doaj-8fef57e70cd249c185bd96f73769b70b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8fef57e70cd249c185bd96f73769b70b2020-11-24T20:57:08ZengGlobal Alliance Against Traffic in WomenAnti-Trafficking Review2286-75112287-01132017-09-01910.14197/atr.20121797266‘Shock and Awe’: A critique of the Ghana-centric child trafficking discourseSamuel OkyereThis paper is a critique of the dominant anti-trafficking discourse and activism in Ghana. It argues that the discourse grossly underplays the role of external forces in shaping the conditions underpinning children’s labour mobility in the past and the hardships underpinning the phenomenon today. In place of critical analysis and understanding, anti-child-trafficking campaigns employ melodramatic ‘shock and awe’ tactics and a tendency to blame local culture or traditions for activists’ claims of ‘pervasive’ child trafficking in the country. The paper suggests that dominant anti-trafficking discourse and activism in Ghana thus reinvigorate historic and persistent external causal agents of inequality which drive Ghanaian children’s labour mobility today. The paper demonstrates this problem and offers correctives to it.http://www.antitraffickingreview.org/index.php/atrjournal/article/view/266child traffickinganti-traffickingGhanahistoryVolta lakeAfricafishing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Samuel Okyere
spellingShingle Samuel Okyere
‘Shock and Awe’: A critique of the Ghana-centric child trafficking discourse
Anti-Trafficking Review
child trafficking
anti-trafficking
Ghana
history
Volta lake
Africa
fishing
author_facet Samuel Okyere
author_sort Samuel Okyere
title ‘Shock and Awe’: A critique of the Ghana-centric child trafficking discourse
title_short ‘Shock and Awe’: A critique of the Ghana-centric child trafficking discourse
title_full ‘Shock and Awe’: A critique of the Ghana-centric child trafficking discourse
title_fullStr ‘Shock and Awe’: A critique of the Ghana-centric child trafficking discourse
title_full_unstemmed ‘Shock and Awe’: A critique of the Ghana-centric child trafficking discourse
title_sort ‘shock and awe’: a critique of the ghana-centric child trafficking discourse
publisher Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women
series Anti-Trafficking Review
issn 2286-7511
2287-0113
publishDate 2017-09-01
description This paper is a critique of the dominant anti-trafficking discourse and activism in Ghana. It argues that the discourse grossly underplays the role of external forces in shaping the conditions underpinning children’s labour mobility in the past and the hardships underpinning the phenomenon today. In place of critical analysis and understanding, anti-child-trafficking campaigns employ melodramatic ‘shock and awe’ tactics and a tendency to blame local culture or traditions for activists’ claims of ‘pervasive’ child trafficking in the country. The paper suggests that dominant anti-trafficking discourse and activism in Ghana thus reinvigorate historic and persistent external causal agents of inequality which drive Ghanaian children’s labour mobility today. The paper demonstrates this problem and offers correctives to it.
topic child trafficking
anti-trafficking
Ghana
history
Volta lake
Africa
fishing
url http://www.antitraffickingreview.org/index.php/atrjournal/article/view/266
work_keys_str_mv AT samuelokyere shockandaweacritiqueoftheghanacentricchildtraffickingdiscourse
_version_ 1716788729241141248