Heli Askola
Legal Responses to Trafficking in Women for Sexual Exploitation in the European Union
Heli Askola
Legal Responses to Trafficking in Women for Sexual Exploitation in the European Union
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This book deals with present efforts to control trafficking in women for sexual exploitation, examining claims that what is needed to effectively prevent and tackle trafficking is a 'comprehensive' approach.
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This book deals with present efforts to control trafficking in women for sexual exploitation, examining claims that what is needed to effectively prevent and tackle trafficking is a 'comprehensive' approach.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hart Publishing
- Seitenzahl: 240
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. März 2007
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 545g
- ISBN-13: 9781841136509
- ISBN-10: 1841136506
- Artikelnr.: 24993818
- Verlag: Hart Publishing
- Seitenzahl: 240
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. März 2007
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 545g
- ISBN-13: 9781841136509
- ISBN-10: 1841136506
- Artikelnr.: 24993818
Heli Askola is a Lecturer in Law at Cardiff University.
1. Introduction 1 1.1. THE BACKGROUND, AIM AND STRUCTURE OF THE BOOK 1.2.
DIVERGENCE, CONVERGENCE AND COUNTRY STUDIES 1.3. SOME COMMENTS ON
TERMINOLOGY AND THE NATURE OF THE PROBLEM 2. Feminism, Prostitution and
Trafficking: A Complex Approach 2.1. THE BACKGROUND: SEXUAL SLAVERY AND SEX
WORK REVISITED 2.2. TALKING ABOUT TRAFFICKING: DEBATES AND DEFINITIONS 2.3.
TOWARDS A MORE COMPREHENSIVE UNDERSTANDING? 3. EC Free Movement Law,
Freedom and Prostitution 3.1. NOTIONS OF FREEDOM AND THE LEGAL REGULATION
OF PROSTITUTION 3.2. FREEDOM IN EUROPEAN LAW 3.2.1. The Common (Sex)
Market? Freedom and Prostitution in EC Law 3.2.2. Some Girls are Freer Than
Others: EC Law and its Outsiders 3.3. CONCLUSIONS 4. Trafficking as
Irregular Migration 4.1. THE EUROPEAN MIGRATION POLICY CONTEXT 4.1.1.
Crowded Houses, People's Homes or Fortress(es in) Europe 4.1.2.
(Im)Migration Policy Dilemmas and the European Union 4.2. FEMALE MIGRANTS,
MIGRATION POLICIES AND EXPLOITATION 4.2.1. From Structural Causes to
Exploitative Situations 4.2.2. Helping Trafficking Victims through
Short-term Residence Permits? 4.3. CONCLUSIONS 5. Criminal Justice
Co-Operation Against Trafficking 5.1. TRAFFICKING OFFENCES IN THE MEMBER
STATES 5.1.1. On the Goals and Contents of the Criminal Provisions 5.1.2.
Applying the Laws: Female Caricatures and Invisible Men 5.2. TRAFFICKING
AND THE THIRD PILLAR 5.2.1. Harmonising or Not-Repressive Emphasis with
Vague Results 5.2.2. Anti-trafficking Co-operation: Security, Justice or
Freedom? 5.3. CONCLUSIONS 6. Trafficking and Human Rights 6.1. FEMALE
MIGRANTS AND INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS 6.1.1. Actual Victims of
Trafficking: Included if Invisible? 6.1.2. Potential Victims of
Trafficking: Marginalisation of the Marginalised? 6.2. EXCLUSION OF MIGRANT
WOMEN FROM DEBATES ON WOMEN'S RIGHTS 6.3. THE EUROPEAN UNION'S HUMAN RIGHTS
DIMENSION 6.4. CONCLUSIONS 7. Towards a More Comprehensive Approach to
Trafficking? 7.1. ANTI-TRAFFICKING IN THE SHORT TO MEDIUM TERM 7.2.
PREVENTING TRAFFICKING IN WOMEN IN THE LONG RUN 7.2.1. Development,
Migration and Gender Empowerment 7.2.2. Sexual Ideologies and the Market
for Sexual Services 7.3. FINAL REMARKS
DIVERGENCE, CONVERGENCE AND COUNTRY STUDIES 1.3. SOME COMMENTS ON
TERMINOLOGY AND THE NATURE OF THE PROBLEM 2. Feminism, Prostitution and
Trafficking: A Complex Approach 2.1. THE BACKGROUND: SEXUAL SLAVERY AND SEX
WORK REVISITED 2.2. TALKING ABOUT TRAFFICKING: DEBATES AND DEFINITIONS 2.3.
TOWARDS A MORE COMPREHENSIVE UNDERSTANDING? 3. EC Free Movement Law,
Freedom and Prostitution 3.1. NOTIONS OF FREEDOM AND THE LEGAL REGULATION
OF PROSTITUTION 3.2. FREEDOM IN EUROPEAN LAW 3.2.1. The Common (Sex)
Market? Freedom and Prostitution in EC Law 3.2.2. Some Girls are Freer Than
Others: EC Law and its Outsiders 3.3. CONCLUSIONS 4. Trafficking as
Irregular Migration 4.1. THE EUROPEAN MIGRATION POLICY CONTEXT 4.1.1.
Crowded Houses, People's Homes or Fortress(es in) Europe 4.1.2.
(Im)Migration Policy Dilemmas and the European Union 4.2. FEMALE MIGRANTS,
MIGRATION POLICIES AND EXPLOITATION 4.2.1. From Structural Causes to
Exploitative Situations 4.2.2. Helping Trafficking Victims through
Short-term Residence Permits? 4.3. CONCLUSIONS 5. Criminal Justice
Co-Operation Against Trafficking 5.1. TRAFFICKING OFFENCES IN THE MEMBER
STATES 5.1.1. On the Goals and Contents of the Criminal Provisions 5.1.2.
Applying the Laws: Female Caricatures and Invisible Men 5.2. TRAFFICKING
AND THE THIRD PILLAR 5.2.1. Harmonising or Not-Repressive Emphasis with
Vague Results 5.2.2. Anti-trafficking Co-operation: Security, Justice or
Freedom? 5.3. CONCLUSIONS 6. Trafficking and Human Rights 6.1. FEMALE
MIGRANTS AND INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS 6.1.1. Actual Victims of
Trafficking: Included if Invisible? 6.1.2. Potential Victims of
Trafficking: Marginalisation of the Marginalised? 6.2. EXCLUSION OF MIGRANT
WOMEN FROM DEBATES ON WOMEN'S RIGHTS 6.3. THE EUROPEAN UNION'S HUMAN RIGHTS
DIMENSION 6.4. CONCLUSIONS 7. Towards a More Comprehensive Approach to
Trafficking? 7.1. ANTI-TRAFFICKING IN THE SHORT TO MEDIUM TERM 7.2.
PREVENTING TRAFFICKING IN WOMEN IN THE LONG RUN 7.2.1. Development,
Migration and Gender Empowerment 7.2.2. Sexual Ideologies and the Market
for Sexual Services 7.3. FINAL REMARKS
1. Introduction 1 1.1. THE BACKGROUND, AIM AND STRUCTURE OF THE BOOK 1.2.
DIVERGENCE, CONVERGENCE AND COUNTRY STUDIES 1.3. SOME COMMENTS ON
TERMINOLOGY AND THE NATURE OF THE PROBLEM 2. Feminism, Prostitution and
Trafficking: A Complex Approach 2.1. THE BACKGROUND: SEXUAL SLAVERY AND SEX
WORK REVISITED 2.2. TALKING ABOUT TRAFFICKING: DEBATES AND DEFINITIONS 2.3.
TOWARDS A MORE COMPREHENSIVE UNDERSTANDING? 3. EC Free Movement Law,
Freedom and Prostitution 3.1. NOTIONS OF FREEDOM AND THE LEGAL REGULATION
OF PROSTITUTION 3.2. FREEDOM IN EUROPEAN LAW 3.2.1. The Common (Sex)
Market? Freedom and Prostitution in EC Law 3.2.2. Some Girls are Freer Than
Others: EC Law and its Outsiders 3.3. CONCLUSIONS 4. Trafficking as
Irregular Migration 4.1. THE EUROPEAN MIGRATION POLICY CONTEXT 4.1.1.
Crowded Houses, People's Homes or Fortress(es in) Europe 4.1.2.
(Im)Migration Policy Dilemmas and the European Union 4.2. FEMALE MIGRANTS,
MIGRATION POLICIES AND EXPLOITATION 4.2.1. From Structural Causes to
Exploitative Situations 4.2.2. Helping Trafficking Victims through
Short-term Residence Permits? 4.3. CONCLUSIONS 5. Criminal Justice
Co-Operation Against Trafficking 5.1. TRAFFICKING OFFENCES IN THE MEMBER
STATES 5.1.1. On the Goals and Contents of the Criminal Provisions 5.1.2.
Applying the Laws: Female Caricatures and Invisible Men 5.2. TRAFFICKING
AND THE THIRD PILLAR 5.2.1. Harmonising or Not-Repressive Emphasis with
Vague Results 5.2.2. Anti-trafficking Co-operation: Security, Justice or
Freedom? 5.3. CONCLUSIONS 6. Trafficking and Human Rights 6.1. FEMALE
MIGRANTS AND INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS 6.1.1. Actual Victims of
Trafficking: Included if Invisible? 6.1.2. Potential Victims of
Trafficking: Marginalisation of the Marginalised? 6.2. EXCLUSION OF MIGRANT
WOMEN FROM DEBATES ON WOMEN'S RIGHTS 6.3. THE EUROPEAN UNION'S HUMAN RIGHTS
DIMENSION 6.4. CONCLUSIONS 7. Towards a More Comprehensive Approach to
Trafficking? 7.1. ANTI-TRAFFICKING IN THE SHORT TO MEDIUM TERM 7.2.
PREVENTING TRAFFICKING IN WOMEN IN THE LONG RUN 7.2.1. Development,
Migration and Gender Empowerment 7.2.2. Sexual Ideologies and the Market
for Sexual Services 7.3. FINAL REMARKS
DIVERGENCE, CONVERGENCE AND COUNTRY STUDIES 1.3. SOME COMMENTS ON
TERMINOLOGY AND THE NATURE OF THE PROBLEM 2. Feminism, Prostitution and
Trafficking: A Complex Approach 2.1. THE BACKGROUND: SEXUAL SLAVERY AND SEX
WORK REVISITED 2.2. TALKING ABOUT TRAFFICKING: DEBATES AND DEFINITIONS 2.3.
TOWARDS A MORE COMPREHENSIVE UNDERSTANDING? 3. EC Free Movement Law,
Freedom and Prostitution 3.1. NOTIONS OF FREEDOM AND THE LEGAL REGULATION
OF PROSTITUTION 3.2. FREEDOM IN EUROPEAN LAW 3.2.1. The Common (Sex)
Market? Freedom and Prostitution in EC Law 3.2.2. Some Girls are Freer Than
Others: EC Law and its Outsiders 3.3. CONCLUSIONS 4. Trafficking as
Irregular Migration 4.1. THE EUROPEAN MIGRATION POLICY CONTEXT 4.1.1.
Crowded Houses, People's Homes or Fortress(es in) Europe 4.1.2.
(Im)Migration Policy Dilemmas and the European Union 4.2. FEMALE MIGRANTS,
MIGRATION POLICIES AND EXPLOITATION 4.2.1. From Structural Causes to
Exploitative Situations 4.2.2. Helping Trafficking Victims through
Short-term Residence Permits? 4.3. CONCLUSIONS 5. Criminal Justice
Co-Operation Against Trafficking 5.1. TRAFFICKING OFFENCES IN THE MEMBER
STATES 5.1.1. On the Goals and Contents of the Criminal Provisions 5.1.2.
Applying the Laws: Female Caricatures and Invisible Men 5.2. TRAFFICKING
AND THE THIRD PILLAR 5.2.1. Harmonising or Not-Repressive Emphasis with
Vague Results 5.2.2. Anti-trafficking Co-operation: Security, Justice or
Freedom? 5.3. CONCLUSIONS 6. Trafficking and Human Rights 6.1. FEMALE
MIGRANTS AND INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS 6.1.1. Actual Victims of
Trafficking: Included if Invisible? 6.1.2. Potential Victims of
Trafficking: Marginalisation of the Marginalised? 6.2. EXCLUSION OF MIGRANT
WOMEN FROM DEBATES ON WOMEN'S RIGHTS 6.3. THE EUROPEAN UNION'S HUMAN RIGHTS
DIMENSION 6.4. CONCLUSIONS 7. Towards a More Comprehensive Approach to
Trafficking? 7.1. ANTI-TRAFFICKING IN THE SHORT TO MEDIUM TERM 7.2.
PREVENTING TRAFFICKING IN WOMEN IN THE LONG RUN 7.2.1. Development,
Migration and Gender Empowerment 7.2.2. Sexual Ideologies and the Market
for Sexual Services 7.3. FINAL REMARKS