000 03503nam a22002657a 4500
999 _c6532
_d6532
005 20250625151522.0
008 200218S2018 -nz|| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aAFVC
100 _96032
_aThorburn, Natalie
245 _aYou can't see it if you’re not looking :
_bsex trafficking in Aotearoa New Zealand
_cNatalie Thorburn
246 _aA thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Social Work, the University of Auckland
260 _c2018
300 _aelectronic document (242 pages) ; PDF file
500 _aPhD thesis (University of Auckland)
520 _aDomestic sex trafficking in Aotearoa has received little contemporary focus due to widespread ambiguity about its nature and prevalence, and discussion on the topic is made difficult by frequent and problematic conflation of ‘sex work’ with ‘trafficking’. This thesis aimed to explore the experiences of Aotearoa victims of sex trafficking, using a narrative approach underpinned by a feminist and social constructionist epistemology in order to ethically navigate methodological issues presented by the likelihood of participants’ past experiences of trauma and gender-based violence. I interviewed 16 victims of trafficking and six key informants, and surveyed 70 medical and 61 social service practitioners. I found that vulnerability to exploitation was catalysed through the intersection of youthfulness, social marginality, and disrupted attachment relationships, which abusers then capitalised on by being perceived as a source of protective love (a phenomenon I label the ‘love-illusion’). Victims’ experiences and attempts to disclose these were often implicitly forbidden within both formal and social contexts. Accordingly, respondents indicated that unfamiliar disclosures were precluded by knowledge gaps or practitioners’ attempts to consign victims’ experiences into subjectively more familiar categories of violence. This thesis provides two layers of analysis. Firstly, it argues for the viability of the feminist concepts of voice and silencing to theorise the experiences of story suppression threaded throughout the findings. Secondly, by applying Bourdieusian concepts of field, habitus, and capital to victims’ experiences, the thesis constructs an explanatory framework for participants’ vulnerability to abuse, their recruitment into and exploitation through trafficking, and their pathways to escape and recovery. This thesis sets out the implications emerging from the two-tier analysis, including practice imperatives regarding prevention, intervention, and support. Ultimately, this thesis argues that these practice imperatives cannot be progressed without the establishment of a shared definitional clarity and a cohesive understanding of the nature of trafficking, and consequent support and intervention needs across and between agencies. This thesis therefore creates an impetus for implementing a feminist and social constructionist understanding of domestic trafficking in order to recognise the manifestations of harm of this social phenomenon in Aotearoa. (Author's abstract). Record #6532
650 _aCHILD SEXUAL ABUSE
_9121
650 _aSEX CRIMES
_9526
650 _aSEX TRAFFICKING
_98862
650 4 _aSEXUAL VIOLENCE
_9531
650 _aTHESES
_9606
650 0 _aVICTIMS OF SEXUAL VIOLENCE
_96716
651 4 _aNEW ZEALAND
_92588
856 _uhttp://hdl.handle.net/2292/37158
942 _cTHESIS
_2ddc