Human Trafficking
Theoretical framework: Human trafficking
It is estimated that the majority of individuals who are illegally trafficked are females. This includes not simply workers in the sex industry, but employees in many other areas of employment in which trafficking commonly occurs, including domestic service and recruitment for sweatshop labor. Although the extent to which human trafficking occurs is difficult to estimate, conservatively most studies indicate that up to 80% of all persons who are trafficked are female (Loring 2007:1).
The predominately female population of the victims of human trafficking has caused many analysts to adopt a theoretical framework of feminism to analyze the phenomenon. A recent report on human trafficking advanced by the American Psychological Association from a feminist paradigm pointed out that given that "economic and social inequalities are among the leading contributing factors to human trafficking," women are often the most vulnerable groups to being exploited by traffickers (Report on trafficking of women and girls, 2011, APA). Women tend to earn less money than males, and have less available recourse to high-paying employment than males. They are often unable to resist the pressures imposed upon them my male parental or other figures and have few modes to resist pressures that cause them to take desperate actions because of a lack of education and family obligations (to other siblings, their own children, or to the elderly).
This is not to deny the fact that males can be exploited by traffickers. "Traffickers, at the same time, take advantage of the gendered perceptions...
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