La Strada Documentation Center

'My Name Is Not Natasha'. How Albanian Women in France Use Trafficking to Overcome Social Exclusion (1998-2001)

Document number
2213
Date
2009
Title
'My Name Is Not Natasha'. How Albanian Women in France Use Trafficking to Overcome Social Exclusion (1998-2001)
Author/publisher
John Davies, Amsterdam University Press
Availability
View/save PDF version of this document
Document type(s)
Research/Study/Analysis,
Keywords
Women's rights; Women; Control and regulation of prostitution, Protection, Punishable forms of prostitution, Prostitution; Sex work; Clients, Abolitionism; New Abolitionism; Prohibitionism; Regulationism,
Summary
This book analyses and explains a trafficking crisis experienced by a group of Albanian women in Lyon, France, between 1998 and 2001. The book proposes new theoretical explanations for Albanian trafficking that considers women's experiences of social stigma and exclusion as becoming the main reason for Albanian women being involved In trafficking, after an initial period when young women were mainly deceived into abusive relationships that were then used to coerce them into forced labour. The Albanian trafficking discourse is currently dominated by the idea that Roma and rural women experiencing poverty and social disadvantage are coerced or deceived into trafficking networks that move them across borders and reduce them to sexual slavery because of the ‘demand' of men for paid sex. This book argues that the conceptualisation that considers trafficking as being best explained by the ‘demand' of men for paid sex and the naivety of the trafficked women is inadequate for explaining many of the trafficking experiences reported by the Albanian women in Lyon.
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