Guest Editors: Jennifer Musto and Mitali Thakor 

Deadline for Submissions: 8 May 2019

The Anti-Trafficking Review calls for papers for a special issue themed ‘Technology, Anti-Trafficking, and Speculative Futures’. 

In the last decade, scholars, activists, and policymakers have repeatedly called for an examination of the role of technology as a contributing force to human trafficking and labour exploitation. In the dominant anti-trafficking imaginary, traffickers are presumed to be tech-savvy exploiters, contrasted with victims assumed to be at heightened risk of violence and harm because of technological manipulation.

Despite government, corporate, non-governmental, and media efforts linking trafficking to technologies, the distinct ways in which technology shapes anti-trafficking efforts remains understudied. A mix of affects ranging from fears that particular technologies directly contribute to trafficking to hopes that technology will solve forced labour have further blunted a critical examination about how tech-facilitated anti-trafficking activities are tied to surveillance, policing, and border enforcement. Moreover, the explosive growth of networked, predictive, and automated technologies makes new tools available to respond to trafficking, raising pressing questions about the human rights implications of integrating technology into counter-trafficking efforts.

This special issue of the Anti-Trafficking Review will explore how technology discursively shapes and practically reformulates anti-trafficking efforts. We invite empirical papers describing how technology has been integrated into anti-trafficking activities on the ground as well as papers documenting how technologies – and laws governing their use – implicate and directly impact trafficked people, migrants, sex workers, and other workers based in informal and unregulated labour sectors. We further welcome conceptual papers that consider theoretical framings of technology at the intersection of ethics, governance, and humanitarianism and which explore extant or new frameworks for accountability and data protection. Finally, we invite speculative papers that look to the future and creatively assess how technologies may undo, recalibrate, and redefine understandings about rights, work, vulnerability, personhood and shape the future of organising and visions of justice.

Contributors are invited to respond to, but need not limit themselves to, the following questions:

  • What accounts for the emergence of the ‘tech’ discourse in anti-trafficking? How is it that technology is seen as both a facilitator and disruptor of trafficking?
  • What explains state, NGO, and corporate preoccupations with technology, and what are the implications of such fears and aspirations? How do state and non-state actors cooperate in counter-trafficking efforts?
  • What empirical data exists about the impact and efficacy of integration of technology into anti-trafficking activities? What does accountability look like in measurements of effectiveness?
  • How are mobile apps, blockchain, drones, predictive and facial recognition software and other technologies being used to identify forced labour situations, assist trafficked persons, and/or prosecute traffickers? What are the intersecting gendered, racial, and class ramifications of these data-driven efforts?
  • How is technology used to resist punitive policies?
  • What role does technology play in agitating for the rights of trafficked people, migrants, sex workers, and other informal and marginalised workers?
  • What are the legal, social and health consequences of regulating, legally restricting, or criminalising the use of particular technologies?
  • Has surveillance and profiling at borders as well as other locations led to the actual identification of victims of trafficking? Is data gathered to curb trafficking used for other purposes and to what effect? How do we balance the continued calls for data collection and analysis with data protection?
  • How will automated technologies shape the future of work? Is the framework of ‘trafficking’ – and by extension ‘anti-trafficking’ – technically fluent and conceptually adequate in accounting for the displacement of workers and precarious working conditions that may accompany automation in myriad labour sectors? Is a new framework needed to address posthuman automated futures?

Deadline for submissions: 8 May 2019.

Word count for full article submissions: 4,000 – 6,000 words, including footnotes, author bio and abstract.

In addition to full-length conceptual, research-based, or case study focused thematic papers, we invite shorter, blog-style pieces of 1,000-1,200 words connected to the issue theme that focus on recent policies and newsworthy developments.

Special Issue to be published in April 2020.

The Review promotes a human rights based approach to anti-trafficking, exploring anti-trafficking in a broader context, including gender analyses and intersections with labour and migration. Academics, practitioners, trafficked persons and advocates are invited to submit articles. Contributions from those living and working in developing countries are particularly welcome. The journal is a freely available, open access publication with a readership in over 100 countries. The Anti-Trafficking Review is abstracted/indexed/tracked in: Web of Science, ProQuest, Ebsco Host, Ulrich’s, Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association, Directory of Open Access Journals, WorldCat, Google Scholar, CrossRef, CNKI and ScienceOpen. 

We advise those interested in submitting to follow the Review‘s style guide and submission procedures, available at www.antitraffickingreview.org. Manuscripts should be submitted in line with the issue’s theme. Please email the editorial team at atr@gaatw.org with any queries.

post

page

attachment

revision

nav_menu_item

custom_css

customize_changeset

oembed_cache

user_request

wp_block

acf-field-group

acf-field

ai1ec_event

Economic shocks and human trafficking risks: Evidence from IOM’s victims of human trafficking database
News & Analysis

Every year, millions of people worldwide are trafficked, which has a profound impact on development and vulnerable populations. Human trafficking violates the fundamental principles of human rights that are linked to a range of core development issu...Read More

“We work like robots”: Discrimination and Exploitation of Migrant Workers in FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Hotels
News & AnalysisPublications

“Here, the salary is not about what you bring to the table. I will never get the same salary as an Arab colleague. There is a lot of discrimination against people from Africa. We are only hired in some types of jobs - security, housekeeping, the k...Read More

Effectiveness of Public Procurement Measures in addressing Modern Slavery
News & AnalysisStandards & Codes of ConductLegislation

This Modern Slavery PEC Policy Brief is the third in a series of Policy Briefs that assess the evidence base on the effectiveness of different regulatory interventions to address modern slavery in global supply chains, a key research priority for th...Read More

TAGS:
An IOM perspective on human trafficking in Niger: Profiles, patterns, progress
News & Analysis

Often referred to as a country at the crossroads of migration flows between west, central and north Africa, Niger is at the heart of complex and multifold forms of mobility as a country of origin, transit and destination. This includes traffickin...Read More