Moving Beyond "Slaves, Sinners, and Saviors": An Intersectional Feminist Analysis of US Sex-Trafficking Discourses, Law and Policy

This article analyzes stories and images of sex trafficking in current mainstream US public discourses, including government publications, NGO materials, news media, and popular films. Noting the similarities and differences among these discourses, the first part demonstrates that they often frame s...

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Main Author: Carrie N. Baker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth 2013-06-01
Series:Journal of Feminist Scholarship
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/jfs/vol4/iss4/2/
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spelling doaj-c7e5d183aff84662baa5d4cb0a54edeb2020-11-25T03:01:05ZengUniversity of Massachusetts, DartmouthJournal of Feminist Scholarship2158-61792158-61792013-06-014123Moving Beyond "Slaves, Sinners, and Saviors": An Intersectional Feminist Analysis of US Sex-Trafficking Discourses, Law and PolicyCarrie N. Baker0Smith CollegeThis article analyzes stories and images of sex trafficking in current mainstream US public discourses, including government publications, NGO materials, news media, and popular films. Noting the similarities and differences among these discourses, the first part demonstrates that they often frame sex trafficking using a rescue narrative that reiterates traditional beliefs and values regarding gender, sexuality, and nationality, relying heavily on patriarchal and orientalist tropes. Reflecting this rescue narrative, mainstream public policies focus on criminal justice solutions to trafficking. The second part suggests alternative frameworks that empower rather than rescue trafficked people. The article argues that the dominant criminal justice approach to trafficking—the state rescuing victims and prosecuting traffickers—will not alone end the problem of sex trafficking, but that public policies must address the structural conditions that create populations vulnerable to trafficking and empower those communities to dismantle inequalities that are the root causes of trafficking.https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/jfs/vol4/iss4/2/sex traffickingpublic discoursesrescue narrativeframingpublic policyfeminism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carrie N. Baker
spellingShingle Carrie N. Baker
Moving Beyond "Slaves, Sinners, and Saviors": An Intersectional Feminist Analysis of US Sex-Trafficking Discourses, Law and Policy
Journal of Feminist Scholarship
sex trafficking
public discourses
rescue narrative
framing
public policy
feminism
author_facet Carrie N. Baker
author_sort Carrie N. Baker
title Moving Beyond "Slaves, Sinners, and Saviors": An Intersectional Feminist Analysis of US Sex-Trafficking Discourses, Law and Policy
title_short Moving Beyond "Slaves, Sinners, and Saviors": An Intersectional Feminist Analysis of US Sex-Trafficking Discourses, Law and Policy
title_full Moving Beyond "Slaves, Sinners, and Saviors": An Intersectional Feminist Analysis of US Sex-Trafficking Discourses, Law and Policy
title_fullStr Moving Beyond "Slaves, Sinners, and Saviors": An Intersectional Feminist Analysis of US Sex-Trafficking Discourses, Law and Policy
title_full_unstemmed Moving Beyond "Slaves, Sinners, and Saviors": An Intersectional Feminist Analysis of US Sex-Trafficking Discourses, Law and Policy
title_sort moving beyond "slaves, sinners, and saviors": an intersectional feminist analysis of us sex-trafficking discourses, law and policy
publisher University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth
series Journal of Feminist Scholarship
issn 2158-6179
2158-6179
publishDate 2013-06-01
description This article analyzes stories and images of sex trafficking in current mainstream US public discourses, including government publications, NGO materials, news media, and popular films. Noting the similarities and differences among these discourses, the first part demonstrates that they often frame sex trafficking using a rescue narrative that reiterates traditional beliefs and values regarding gender, sexuality, and nationality, relying heavily on patriarchal and orientalist tropes. Reflecting this rescue narrative, mainstream public policies focus on criminal justice solutions to trafficking. The second part suggests alternative frameworks that empower rather than rescue trafficked people. The article argues that the dominant criminal justice approach to trafficking—the state rescuing victims and prosecuting traffickers—will not alone end the problem of sex trafficking, but that public policies must address the structural conditions that create populations vulnerable to trafficking and empower those communities to dismantle inequalities that are the root causes of trafficking.
topic sex trafficking
public discourses
rescue narrative
framing
public policy
feminism
url https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/jfs/vol4/iss4/2/
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