This systematic review of the global literature on recruitment into sex trafficking reveals a need for more targeted research on the initial recruitment phase of sex trafficking and research with traffickers.
This systematic review synthesizing the global literature on recruitment into sex trafficking to describe what we know and identifies gaps highlights a need for more targeted research on the initial recruitment phase of sex trafficking and research with traffickers. Sex trafficking is a global human rights issue and a form of violence with numerous health and mental health sequelae. The authors identified 5,526 articles, subjected 340 to full-text review, and only 34 met inclusion/exclusion criteria. The authors also found that the empirical literature on recruitment into trafficking is unclear and many studies lack empirical rigour. The literature base lacks detail about tactics employed in the initial recruitment phase and does not differentiate between recruitment and ongoing control of victims. There are many studies on trafficking vulnerabilities, but the literature is weak on how and when traffickers leverage vulnerabilities, and how structural conditions shape effectiveness of trafficking recruitment mechanisms in particular settings. (Published Abstract Provided)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Adapting a Dialectical Behavior Therapy Skills Group Within a Jail Setting: Implementation Challenges and Considerations
- A Self-assessment Tool for Helping Identify Police Burnout Among Investigators of Child Sexual Abuse Material
- Grooming Traffickers: Investigating the Techniques and Mechanisms for Seducing and Coercing New Traffickers