Sex trafficking : the global market in women and children
Data(s) |
2006
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Resumo |
This book is one of a series on contemporary social issues. It provides a painstakingly researched analysis of the contemporary phenomenon of sex trafficking. As the author Kathryn Farr points out, the phenomenon is not all that contemporary, as women and children have historically been trafficked and enslaved for the purposes of prostitution, particularly during war: in World War II on the southern islands of Okinawa, the Philippines, Hawaii, Liberia, Japan, the Korean war, the Vietnam war, and more recently in Bosnia and Rwanda. Farr links the phenomenon to military socialization, especially to its patriarchal culture which celebrates hyper-masculinity, eroticizes violence, desensitizes soldiers to suffering and brutality and treats women as sex objects. |
Identificador | |
Publicador |
Sage Publications, Inc. |
Relação |
http://www.jstor.org/stable/info/30045767 Carrington, Kerry (2006) Sex trafficking : the global market in women and children. Contemporary Sociology, 35(2), pp. 175-177. |
Fonte |
Faculty of Law; School of Law |
Tipo |
Review |