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Revisiting the law and governance of trafficking, forced labor and modern slavery /

Revisiting the law and governance of trafficking, forced labor and modern slavery / edited by Prabha Kotiswaran, King's College London. - 1 online resource (xvii, 581 pages.) : - Cambridge studies in law and society . - Cambridge studies in law and society. Cambridge core. .

Online access provided by Cambridge University Press as part of Cambridge core.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Machine generated contents note: Introduction. From sex panic to extreme exploitation: revisiting the law of 'human trafficking' Prabha Kotiswaran; Part I. Revisiting the Text and Context of Article 3: 1. Trafficked and exploited: the urgent need for coherence in international law Michael Dottridge; 2. The international legal definition 'trafficking in persons': scope and application Anne T. Gallagher; 3. Contemporary debt bondage, 'self-exploitation' and the limits of the trafficking definition Janie A. Chuang; 4. Subjectivity of coercion: workers' experiences with trafficking in the United States Denise Brennan; Part II. Anti-Trafficking Law: A Legal Realist Critique: 5. The right to locomotion? Trafficking, slavery and the state Julia O'Connell Davidson; 6. Anti-trafficking and the new indenture Janet Halley; 7. Immigration controls and 'modern-day slavery' Chantal Thomas; 8. Representing, counting, valuing: managing definitional uncertainty in the law of trafficking Kerry Rittich; Part III. Trafficking and New Forms of Governance: 9. Counting the uncountable: constructing trafficking through measurement Sally Engle Merry; 10. Addressing HIV/AIDS at the intersection of anti-trafficking and health law and policy Aziza Ahmed; 11. Brokered subjects and sexual investability Elizabeth Bernstein; Part IV. New Directions in Anti-Trafficking Law: The Rule of the ILO: 12. Raising the bar: the adoption of new ILO standards against forced labour Beate Andrees and Amanda Aikman; 13. Trafficking and forced labour: filling in the gaps with the adoption of the supplementary ILO standards, 2014 Lee Swepston; 14. Combating labor exploitation in the global economy: the need for a differentiated approach Robert Plant; 15. Human trafficking and forced labor: should companies be liable? Zuzanna Muskat-Gorska; Part V. Rethinking Trafficking through Migration Policy: 16. The paradox of 'legality': temporary migrant worker programs and vulnerability to trafficking Hila Shamir; 17. The indentured mobility of migrant domestic workers: the case of Dubai Rhacel Salazar Parrenas and Rachel Silvey; 18. Migrants, unfree labour, and the legal construction of domestic servitude: migrant domestic workers in the UK Judy Fudge and Kendra Strauss.


Electronic reproduction.
Cambridge
Available via World Wide Web.

9781316675809 (electronic bk.) 1316675807 (electronic bk.)


Human trafficking--Law and legislation.
Forced labor--Law and legislation.
Slavery.

K5297 / .R48 2017

345/.02551