This article explores the impact that nationality can have on a person’s experience of being identified as a victim of trafficking in the UK. Responses to individuals and disparities in rates of recognition depending on nationality are cause for great concern. The rhetoric and the response to women who have experienced trafficking varies considerably depending upon the citizenship, residency and documentation status of the individual, particularly highlighting the differential treatment of trafficking cases of British women, European Union nationals, and third-country (non UK, non EU) nationals, the majority of whom are also asylum seekers. This differential treatment is played out in multiple ways, many of which result in women’s inability...
In this article I analyse women asylum seekers’ claims of gendered ill-treatment under Article 3 of ...
Although efforts have been directed towards the protection of victims of human trafficking and smugg...
The article argues that although the gradual recognition of non-State actors as agents of persecutio...
Exploring the (re)emergence of human trafficking as a global social problem, this article presents a...
While the drivers and processes of forced migration may overlap for people seeking refuge or experie...
A term as morally and politically loaded as ‘modern day slave trade’ inevitably provokes strong and ...
This article examines asylum-seeker women’s appeals involving forced marriage at the Upper Tribunal ...
This article argues that little has changed over the past 130 years when it comes to negative repres...
To mark International Women’s Day the Research Group for Law, Gender and Sexuality at Westminster La...
This article deals with how return programmes for rejected asylum seekers and irregular migrants con...
Victims of human trafficking who seek international protection in their country of destination face ...
The UK’s Modern Slavery Strategy, launched in 2014, gives Border Force Officers a key role as anti-s...
This paper argues that the feminisation of migration has heightened the awareness of human trafficki...
This article is based on the findings of research undertaken towards a doctoral thesis funded by the...
This article is based on the findings of research undertaken towards a doctoral thesis funded by the...
In this article I analyse women asylum seekers’ claims of gendered ill-treatment under Article 3 of ...
Although efforts have been directed towards the protection of victims of human trafficking and smugg...
The article argues that although the gradual recognition of non-State actors as agents of persecutio...
Exploring the (re)emergence of human trafficking as a global social problem, this article presents a...
While the drivers and processes of forced migration may overlap for people seeking refuge or experie...
A term as morally and politically loaded as ‘modern day slave trade’ inevitably provokes strong and ...
This article examines asylum-seeker women’s appeals involving forced marriage at the Upper Tribunal ...
This article argues that little has changed over the past 130 years when it comes to negative repres...
To mark International Women’s Day the Research Group for Law, Gender and Sexuality at Westminster La...
This article deals with how return programmes for rejected asylum seekers and irregular migrants con...
Victims of human trafficking who seek international protection in their country of destination face ...
The UK’s Modern Slavery Strategy, launched in 2014, gives Border Force Officers a key role as anti-s...
This paper argues that the feminisation of migration has heightened the awareness of human trafficki...
This article is based on the findings of research undertaken towards a doctoral thesis funded by the...
This article is based on the findings of research undertaken towards a doctoral thesis funded by the...
In this article I analyse women asylum seekers’ claims of gendered ill-treatment under Article 3 of ...
Although efforts have been directed towards the protection of victims of human trafficking and smugg...
The article argues that although the gradual recognition of non-State actors as agents of persecutio...